In Kotlin, a function with at least one argument can be defined either as a regular non-member function or as an extension function with one argument being a receiver.
As to the scoping, there seems to be no difference: both can be declared inside or outside classes and other functions, and both can or cannot have visibility modifiers equally.
Language reference seems not to recommend using regular functions or extension functions for different situations.
So, my question is: when do extension functions give advantage over regular non-member ones? And when regular ones over extensions?
foo.bar(baz, baq)
vs bar(foo, baz, baq)
.
Is it just a hint of a function semantics (receiver is definitely in focus) or are there cases when using extensions functions makes code much cleaner or opens up opportunities?
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