When converting Java code to Ceylon code, sometimes I encounter situations where some Java class constructors confuse validation and initialization. Let's use a simple but contrived code example to illustrate what I mean.
Consider the following Java class. (Dude, don't write code like this at home)
public class Period { private final Date startDate; private final Date endDate; //returns null if the given String //does not represent a valid Date private Date parseDate(String date) { ... } public Period(String start, String end) { startDate = parseDate(start); endDate = parseDate(end); } public boolean isValid() { return startDate!=null && endDate!=null; } public Date getStartDate() { if (startDate==null) throw new IllegalStateException(); return startDate; } public Date getEndDate() { if (endDate==null) throw new IllegalStateException(); return endDate; } }
Hey, I've warned before, it's artificial. However, it's actually not uncommon to find something like this in real Java code.
The problem here is that even if the validation of the input parameter (in the hidden parseDate() method) fails, we still get an instance of Period. But the Period we obtained is not a "valid" state. Strictly speaking, what do I mean?
Well, I would say that an object is in an inactive state if it cannot meaningfully respond to common operations. In this example, getStartDate() and getEndDate() will throw an IllegalStateException, which is a situation that I don't think "makes sense".
Looking at this example from the other side, when designing Period, we have a failure of type (Actually, in real code, I'm more likely to encounter a getStartDate() method that doesn't check for null, which results in a NullPointerException after this line of code, which is even worse.) We can easily convert the above Period class into a Ceylon-style class:shared class Period(String start, String end) { //returns null if the given String //does not represent a valid Date Date? parseDate(String date) => ... ; value maybeStartDate = parseDate(start); value maybeEndDate = parseDate(end); shared Boolean valid => maybeStartDate exists && maybeEndDate exists; shared Date startDate { assert (exists maybeStartDate); return maybeStartDate; } shared Date endDate { assert (exists maybeEndDate); return maybeEndDate; } }
public class Period { private final Date startDate; private final Date endDate; //throws if the given String //does not represent a valid Date private Date parseDate(String date) throws DateFormatException { ... } public Period(String start, String end) throws DateFormatException { startDate = parseDate(start); endDate = parseDate(end); } public Date getStartDate() { return startDate; } public Date getEndDate() { return endDate; } }
try { Period p = new Period(start, end); ... } catch (DateFormatException dfe) { ... }
function in Java would throw a checked exception, Ceylon would call the function to return a union type. Since, a class initializer does not return any type other than the class itself, we need to extract some mixed initialization/validation logic into a factory function. //returns DateFormatError if the given
//String does not represent a valid Date
Date|DateFormatError parseDate(String date) => ... ;
shared Period|DateFormatError parsePeriod
(String start, String end) {
value startDate = parseDate(start);
if (is DateFormatError startDate) {
return startDate;
}
value endDate = parseDate(end);
if (is DateFormatError endDate) {
return endDate;
}
return Period(startDate, endDate);
}
shared class Period(startDate, endDate) {
shared Date startDate;
shared Date endDate;
}
value p = parsePeriod(start, end); if (is DateFormatError p) { ... } else { ... }
Alternatively, if we don't care about the actual issues with the given date format (which is possible, assuming we work The initialization code loses that information), we can use Null instead DateFormatError:
//returns null if the given String //does not represent a valid Date Date? parseDate(String date) => ... ; shared Period? parsePeriod(String start, String end) => if (exists startDate = parseDate(start), exists endDate = parseDate(end)) then Period(startDate, endDate) else null; shared class Period(startDate, endDate) { shared Date startDate; shared Date endDate; }
The approach using the factory function is excellent, to say the least, because generally speaking it has Better isolation. This is especially useful in Ceylon, where the compiler adds some very strict restrictions on the object initialization logic to ensure that all fields of an object are assigned only once.
The above is the detailed content of Code case sharing for the construction and verification of Java and Ceylon objects. For more information, please follow other related articles on the PHP Chinese website!