In another question, I'm advised to use with in a place where one normally uses <: or <:<. So instead of defining functions in either of the following two ways:
scala> def f[A,C <: Seq[A]](xs: C) = 0
f: [A, C <: scala.collection.immutable.Seq[A]](xs: C)Int
scala> f(List(1))
<console>:54: error: inferred type arguments [Nothing,List[Int]] do not conform to method f's type parameter bounds [A,C <: scala.collection.immutable.Seq[A]]
f(List(1))
^
scala> implicit def f[A,C](xs: C)(implicit ev: C <:< Seq[A]) = new { def foo = 0 }
f: [A, C](xs: C)(implicit ev: <:<[C,scala.collection.immutable.Seq[A]])java.lang.Object{def foo: Int}
scala> List(0) foo
<console>:54: error: Cannot prove that List[Int] <:< scala.collection.immutable.Seq[A].
List(0) foo
^
scala> f(List(0)) foo
res17: Int = 0
One can do:
scala> implicit def f[A,C](xs: C with Seq[A]) = new { def foo = 0 }
f: [A, C](xs: C with scala.collection.immutable.Seq[A])java.lang.Object{def foo: Int}
scala> List(0) foo
res18: Int = 0
My question is: besides the above particular case, when should one use with instead of <: or <:< on the type parameter? Why not always use with instead? I'm looking for a discussion of the nuances among the alternatives here. Thanks.