Does Dart create new methods for each new instance? - methods

I'm currently designing a class structure for a project I'm working on. I have a method that uses one instance state. I don't now wheter it's better to make this method static and parse this instance state as an argument or just tie the method to the instance.
If performance was no issue I would tie the method without any doubt to the instance, because it's much cleaner that way. But in my case performance will be really crucial. So, does it make any difference performance-wise to make the method static / non-static?
If it makes no difference, will that be true for the generated *.dart.js javascript aswell?
Edit:
After reading my own question it's not really coherent. I will try to formulate it again, but clearer.
This code ...
class MyClass {
void foo() {}
}
void main() {
MyClass a = new MyClass();
MyClass b = new MyClass();
print(a.foo == b.foo);
}
... outputs false. This make me think that for each new instance a new method is created. If that is true this seems to me as a waste of memory. So, does each new instance create a copy of all it's bound methods?
PS: The question is basically the same as this question, but then for Dart.

No, creating two instances doesn't duplicate the methods. Methods are like static functions where the object instance is passesd as argument with the name this.
Don't worry too much about performance before you run into actual performance issues especially at such micro-level.
Usually performance isn't a matter for the bigger part of your applications code base because most of the code is usually run very seldom.
When you run into performance issues you can investigate and find the real hot spots that are executed often enough so that optimization actually makes a difference.

Dart classes don't have different methods for different instances.
There is only one method per class.
Extracting a function creates a new function object every time you do it, and those objects may or may not be equal depending on which function you extract from which objects:
class MyClass {
void foo() {}
}
void main() {
MyClass a = new MyClass();
MyClass b = new MyClass();
print(a.foo == b.foo); // False.
print(a.foo == a.foo); // True
print(identical(a.foo, a.foo)); // False!
}
When you perform a method extraction from an object, you create a new object. The new object is a "closure" which contains the function to call and the object to call it on. Two such closures are equal (according to operator==) if they refer to the same function on the same object. That's why a.foo and b.foo are not equal - they are equivalent to () => a.foo() and () => b.foo() respectively, and since a and b are not the same object, the function objects are not considered equal.

Related

JAVA 8 Extract predicates as fields or methods?

What is the cleaner way of extracting predicates which will have multiple uses. Methods or Class fields?
The two examples:
1.Class Field
void someMethod() {
IntStream.range(1, 100)
.filter(isOverFifty)
.forEach(System.out::println);
}
private IntPredicate isOverFifty = number -> number > 50;
2.Method
void someMethod() {
IntStream.range(1, 100)
.filter(isOverFifty())
.forEach(System.out::println);
}
private IntPredicate isOverFifty() {
return number -> number > 50;
}
For me, the field way looks a little bit nicer, but is this the right way? I have my doubts.
Generally you cache things that are expensive to create and these stateless lambdas are not. A stateless lambda will have a single instance created for the entire pipeline (under the current implementation). The first invocation is the most expensive one - the underlying Predicate implementation class will be created and linked; but this happens only once for both stateless and stateful lambdas.
A stateful lambda will use a different instance for each element and it might make sense to cache those, but your example is stateless, so I would not.
If you still want that (for reading purposes I assume), I would do it in a class Predicates let's assume. It would be re-usable across different classes as well, something like this:
public final class Predicates {
private Predicates(){
}
public static IntPredicate isOverFifty() {
return number -> number > 50;
}
}
You should also notice that the usage of Predicates.isOverFifty inside a Stream and x -> x > 50 while semantically the same, will have different memory usages.
In the first case, only a single instance (and class) will be created and served to all clients; while the second (x -> x > 50) will create not only a different instance, but also a different class for each of it's clients (think the same expression used in different places inside your application). This happens because the linkage happens per CallSite - and in the second case the CallSite is always different.
But that is something you should not rely on (and probably even consider) - these Objects and classes are fast to build and fast to remove by the GC - whatever fits your needs - use that.
To answer, it's better If you expand those lambda expressions for old fashioned Java. You can see now, these are two ways we used in our codes. So, the answer is, it all depends how you write a particular code segment.
private IntPredicate isOverFifty = new IntPredicate<Integer>(){
public void test(number){
return number > 50;
}
};
private IntPredicate isOverFifty() {
return new IntPredicate<Integer>(){
public void test(number){
return number > 50;
}
};
}
1) For field case you will have always allocated predicate for each new your object. Not a big deal if you have a few instances, likes, service. But if this is a value object which can be N, this is not good solution. Also keep in mind that someMethod() may not be called at all. One of possible solution is to make predicate as static field.
2) For method case you will create the predicate once every time for someMethod() call. After GC will discard it.

Why should functions used for creating a Predicate be defined as static?

While reading up on the new features introduced in Java 8, I came across the concept of Predicates. I noticed that most of the examples provided on the internet and in books use static functions to create predicates.
Consider the following Apple class for example :
public class Apple {
private String color;
private int weight;
private static final int SMALL_APPLE_MAX_WEIGHT = 150;
public Apple(String color, int weight) {
this.color = color;
this.weight = weight;
}
public static boolean isGreenApple(Apple apple) {
return null!=apple && null!=apple.getColor() && "green".equals(apple.getColor());
}
public boolean isBigApple() {
return this.getWeight() > SMALL_APPLE_MAX_WEIGHT;
}
}
I can now create a new predicate as follows :
Predicate<Apple> isGreenApple = Apple::isGreenApple;
Predicate<Apple> isBigApple = Apple::isBigApple;
As shown above, I can create a predicate using both a static as well as an instance method. Which approach is the preferred approach then and why?
For a method reference, there is no difference between an instance method A.foo() and a static method foo(A), in fact, the compiler will reject a method reference as ambiguous if both exist.
So the decision whether to use an instance method or a static method does not depend on the question whether you want to create a function via method reference for it.
Rather, you have to apply the same considerations us usual. Should the method be overridable, it has to be an instance method, otherwise, if it represents a fixed algorithm, you may consider a static method, but of course, a final method would do as well.
static methods are obviously unavoidable when you are not the maintainer of the class whose instance you want to process, in other words, when the containing class has to be different than the class of the instance. But even if the class is the same but you feel that it could be placed in another (utility) class as well, declaring it as static might be the better choice.
This holds especially when there are more than one parameter and the first one isn’t special to the operation, e.g. max(Foo,Foo) should be a static method rather than an instance method max(Foo) on Foo.
But in the end there are different programming styles out there and the answer is that method references do not mandate a particular programming style.
Regarding why there are so many examples using static methods; well I don’t know enough examples to decide whether your observation is right or just a subjective view. But maybe some tutorial writers are themselves not aware about the possibility to refer to an instance method as a function taking the method receiver as first argument.
I think, there are examples, like
Predicate<String> empty=String::isEmpty;
Predicate<CharSequence> isHello="hello"::contentEquals;
which are worth to be shown in tutorials to emphasize that you are not required to create methods specially intended to be used as method references, but that in fact there are a lot of already existing methods, static and non-static, to be directly usable with method references.
What I am more interested in knowing is why are all examples on predicates shown using static methods?
The reference appears on the Class as no additional argument is required.
Any specific reason for not using instance methods?
For non-static methods that would make sense. In the case of
Predicate<Apple> isBigApple = Apple::isBigApple;
Predicate needs a argument so it takes this. An example of a non-method call would be something like
List<Apple> bigApples = new ArrayList<>();
apples.stream().filter(Apple::isBigApple).forEach(bigApple::add);

Does this method call violate the Law Of Demeter?

Say you have something like the following (sadly, I'm not allowed to post the original code):
public void foo() {
MyObject obj = getMyObject();
bar(obj);
}
public void bar(MyObject obj) {
Type type = new Type(obj.getOtherObject());
}
foo calls bar, passes in obj. But instead of using obj,it calls a getter on it to retrieve the needed information. Does this violate the Law Of Demeter?
Would it be better to write something like this:
public void foo() {
MyObject obj = getMyObject();
bar(obj.getOtherObject());
}
public void bar(MyOtherObject otherObj) {
Type type = new Type(otherObj);
}
Indeed according to the wiki on the Law of Demeter:
The fundamental notion is that a given object should assume as little
as possible about the structure or properties of anything else...
Your bar assumes that a given MyObject (a concrete type so strongly coupled, again against LoD) has a method called getOtherObject, so your proposed solution sorts the assumption and moves the code closer to adhering to LoD. You can go even further and instead provide the type that bar wants:
bar(new Type(obj.getOtherObject());
Depending on your language, can you not pass an interface/contract instead of a solid type? This would turn the strong coupling into a looser coupling.
Of course, if this is all internal to a given object then perhaps it isn't breaking LoD because it's a "close friend":
Each unit should have only limited knowledge about other units: only units "closely" related to the current unit.
Each unit should only talk to its friends; don't talk to strangers.
Only talk to your immediate friends.
In OO I think your original code is breaking LoD based on this argument:
...an object A can request a service (call a method) of an object
instance B, but object A cannot "reach through" object B to access yet
another object, C, to request its services. Doing so would mean that
object A implicitly requires greater knowledge of object B's internal
structure.
To me it seems that you are using obj in order to call getOtherObj. Your proposed code is a potential solution.

What's the best way to refactor a method that has too many (6+) parameters?

Occasionally I come across methods with an uncomfortable number of parameters. More often than not, they seem to be constructors. It seems like there ought to be a better way, but I can't see what it is.
return new Shniz(foo, bar, baz, quux, fred, wilma, barney, dino, donkey)
I've thought of using structs to represent the list of parameters, but that just seems to shift the problem from one place to another, and create another type in the process.
ShnizArgs args = new ShnizArgs(foo, bar, baz, quux, fred, wilma, barney, dino, donkey)
return new Shniz(args);
So that doesn't seem like an improvement. So what is the best approach?
I'm going to assume you mean C#. Some of these things apply to other languages, too.
You have several options:
switch from constructor to property setters. This can make code more readable, because it's obvious to the reader which value corresponds to which parameters. Object Initializer syntax makes this look nice. It's also simple to implement, since you can just use auto-generated properties and skip writing the constructors.
class C
{
public string S { get; set; }
public int I { get; set; }
}
new C { S = "hi", I = 3 };
However, you lose immutability, and you lose the ability to ensure that the required values are set before using the object at compile time.
Builder Pattern.
Think about the relationship between string and StringBuilder. You can get this for your own classes. I like to implement it as a nested class, so class C has related class C.Builder. I also like a fluent interface on the builder. Done right, you can get syntax like this:
C c = new C.Builder()
.SetX(4) // SetX is the fluent equivalent to a property setter
.SetY("hello")
.ToC(); // ToC is the builder pattern analog to ToString()
// Modify without breaking immutability
c = c.ToBuilder().SetX(2).ToC();
// Still useful to have a traditional ctor:
c = new C(1, "...");
// And object initializer syntax is still available:
c = new C.Builder { X = 4, Y = "boing" }.ToC();
I have a PowerShell script that lets me generate the builder code to do all this, where the input looks like:
class C {
field I X
field string Y
}
So I can generate at compile time. partial classes let me extend both the main class and the builder without modifying the generated code.
"Introduce Parameter Object" refactoring. See the Refactoring Catalog. The idea is that you take some of the parameters you're passing and put them in to a new type, and then pass an instance of that type instead. If you do this without thinking, you will end up back where you started:
new C(a, b, c, d);
becomes
new C(new D(a, b, c, d));
However, this approach has the greatest potential to make a positive impact on your code. So, continue by following these steps:
Look for subsets of parameters that make sense together. Just mindlessly grouping all parameters of a function together doesn't get you much; the goal is to have groupings that make sense. You'll know you got it right when the name of the new type is obvious.
Look for other places where these values are used together, and use the new type there, too. Chances are, when you've found a good new type for a set of values that you already use all over the place, that new type will make sense in all those places, too.
Look for functionality that is in the existing code, but belongs on the new type.
For example, maybe you see some code that looks like:
bool SpeedIsAcceptable(int minSpeed, int maxSpeed, int currentSpeed)
{
return currentSpeed >= minSpeed & currentSpeed < maxSpeed;
}
You could take the minSpeed and maxSpeed parameters and put them in a new type:
class SpeedRange
{
public int Min;
public int Max;
}
bool SpeedIsAcceptable(SpeedRange sr, int currentSpeed)
{
return currentSpeed >= sr.Min & currentSpeed < sr.Max;
}
This is better, but to really take advantage of the new type, move the comparisons into the new type:
class SpeedRange
{
public int Min;
public int Max;
bool Contains(int speed)
{
return speed >= min & speed < Max;
}
}
bool SpeedIsAcceptable(SpeedRange sr, int currentSpeed)
{
return sr.Contains(currentSpeed);
}
And now we're getting somewhere: the implementation of SpeedIsAcceptable() now says what you mean, and you have a useful, reusable class. (The next obvious step is to make SpeedRange in to Range<Speed>.)
As you can see, Introduce Parameter Object was a good start, but its real value was that it helped us discover a useful type that has been missing from our model.
The best way would be to find ways to group the arguments together. This assumes, and really only works if, you would end up with multiple "groupings" of arguments.
For instance, if you are passing the specification for a rectangle, you can pass x, y, width, and height or you could just pass a rectangle object that contains x, y, width, and height.
Look for things like this when refactoring to clean it up somewhat. If the arguments really can't be combined, start looking at whether you have a violation of the Single Responsibility Principle.
If it's a constructor, particularly if there are multiple overloaded variants, you should look at the Builder pattern:
Foo foo = new Foo()
.configBar(anything)
.configBaz(something, somethingElse)
// and so on
If it's a normal method, you should think about the relationships between the values being passed, and perhaps create a Transfer Object.
The classic answer to this is to use a class to encapsulate some, or all, of the parameters. In theory that sounds great, but I'm the kind of guy who creates classes for concepts that have meaning in the domain, so it's not always easy to apply this advice.
E.g. instead of:
driver.connect(host, user, pass)
You could use
config = new Configuration()
config.setHost(host)
config.setUser(user)
config.setPass(pass)
driver.connect(config)
YMMV
When I see long parameter lists, my first question is whether this function or object is doing too much. Consider:
EverythingInTheWorld earth=new EverythingInTheWorld(firstCustomerId,
lastCustomerId,
orderNumber, productCode, lastFileUpdateDate,
employeeOfTheMonthWinnerForLastMarch,
yearMyHometownWasIncorporated, greatGrandmothersBloodType,
planetName, planetSize, percentWater, ... etc ...);
Of course this example is deliberately ridiculous, but I've seen plenty of real programs with examples only slightly less ridiculous, where one class is used to hold many barely related or unrelated things, apparently just because the same calling program needs both or because the programmer happened to think of both at the same time. Sometimes the easy solution is to just break the class into multiple pieces each of which does its own thing.
Just slightly more complicated is when a class really does need to deal with multiple logical things, like both a customer order and general information about the customer. In these cases, crate a class for customer and a class for order, and let them talk to each other as necessary. So instead of:
Order order=new Order(customerName, customerAddress, customerCity,
customerState, customerZip,
orderNumber, orderType, orderDate, deliveryDate);
We could have:
Customer customer=new Customer(customerName, customerAddress,
customerCity, customerState, customerZip);
Order order=new Order(customer, orderNumber, orderType, orderDate, deliveryDate);
While of course I prefer functions that take just 1 or 2 or 3 parameters, sometimes we have to accept that, realistically, this function takes a bunch, and that the number of itself does not really create complexity. For example:
Employee employee=new Employee(employeeId, firstName, lastName,
socialSecurityNumber,
address, city, state, zip);
Yeah, it's a bunch of fields, but probably all we're going to do with them is save them to a database record or throw them on a screen or some such. There's not really a lot of processing here.
When my parameter lists do get long, I much prefer if I can give the fields different data types. Like when I see a function like:
void updateCustomer(String type, String status,
int lastOrderNumber, int pastDue, int deliveryCode, int birthYear,
int addressCode,
boolean newCustomer, boolean taxExempt, boolean creditWatch,
boolean foo, boolean bar);
And then I see it called with:
updateCustomer("A", "M", 42, 3, 1492, 1969, -7, true, false, false, true, false);
I get concerned. Looking at the call, it's not at all clear what all these cryptic numbers, codes, and flags mean. This is just asking for errors. A programmer might easily get confused about the order of the parameters and accidentally switch two, and if they're the same data type, the compiler would just accept it. I'd much rather have a signature where all these things are enums, so a call passes in things like Type.ACTIVE instead of "A" and CreditWatch.NO instead of "false", etc.
This is quoted from Fowler and Beck book: "Refactoring"
Long Parameter List
In our early programming days we were taught to pass in as parameters everything needed by
a routine. This was understandable because the alternative was global data, and global data is
evil and usually painful. Objects change this situation because if you don't have something
you need, you can always ask another object to get it for you. Thus with objects you don't
pass in everything the method needs; instead you pass enough so that the method can get to
everything it needs. A lot of what a method needs is available on the method's host class. In
object-oriented programs parameter lists tend to be much smaller than in traditional
programs.
This is good because long parameter lists are hard to understand, because they become
inconsistent and difficult to use, and because you are forever changing them as you need
more data. Most changes are removed by passing objects because you are much more likely
to need to make only a couple of requests to get at a new piece of data.
Use Replace Parameter with Method when you can get the data in one parameter by making
a request of an object you already know about. This object might be a field or it might be
another parameter. Use Preserve Whole Object to take a bunch of data gleaned from an
object and replace it with the object itself. If you have several data items with no logical
object, use Introduce Parameter Object.
There is one important exception to making these changes. This is when you explicitly do
not want to create a dependency from the called object to the larger object. In those cases
unpacking data and sending it along as parameters is reasonable, but pay attention to the pain
involved. If the parameter list is too long or changes too often, you need to rethink your
dependency structure.
I don't want to sound like a wise-crack, but you should also check to make sure the data you are passing around really should be passed around: Passing stuff to a constructor (or method for that matter) smells a bit like to little emphasis on the behavior of an object.
Don't get me wrong: Methods and constructors will have a lot of parameters sometimes. But when encountered, do try to consider encapsulating data with behavior instead.
This kind of smell (since we are talking about refactoring, this horrible word seems appropriate...) might also be detected for objects that have a lot (read: any) properties or getters/setters.
If some of the constructor parameters are optional it makes sense to use a builder, which would get the required parameters in the constructor, and have methods for the optional ones, returning the builder, to be used like this:
return new Shniz.Builder(foo, bar).baz(baz).quux(quux).build();
The details of this are described in Effective Java, 2nd Ed., p. 11. For method arguments, the same book (p. 189) describes three approaches for shortening parameter lists:
Break the method into multiple methods that take fewer arguments
Create static helper member classes to represent groups of parameters, i.e. pass a DinoDonkey instead of dino and donkey
If parameters are optional, the builder above can be adopted for methods, defining an object for all parameters, setting the required ones and then calling some execute method on it
You can try to group your parameter into multiples meaningful struct/class (if possible).
I would generally lean towards the structs approach - presumably the majority of these parameters are related in some way and represent the state of some element that is relevant to your method.
If the set of parameters can't be made into a meaningful object, that's probably a sign that Shniz is doing too much, and the refactoring should involve breaking the method down into separate concerns.
I would use the default constructor and property settors. C# 3.0 has some nice syntax to do this automagically.
return new Shniz { Foo = foo,
Bar = bar,
Baz = baz,
Quuz = quux,
Fred = fred,
Wilma = wilma,
Barney = barney,
Dino = dino,
Donkey = donkey
};
The code improvement comes in simplifying the constructor and not having to support multiple methods to support various combinations. The "calling" syntax is still a little "wordy", but not really any worse than calling the property settors manually.
You haven't provided enough information to warrant a good answer. A long parameter list isn't inherently bad.
Shniz(foo, bar, baz, quux, fred, wilma, barney, dino, donkey)
could be interpreted as:
void Shniz(int foo, int bar, int baz, int quux, int fred,
int wilma, int barney, int dino, int donkey) { ...
In this case you're far better off to create a class to encapsulate the parameters because you give meaning to the different parameters in a way that the compiler can check as well as visually making the code easier to read. It also makes it easier to read and refactor later.
// old way
Shniz(1,2,3,2,3,2,1,2);
Shniz(1,2,2,3,3,2,1,2);
//versus
ShnizParam p = new ShnizParam { Foo = 1, Bar = 2, Baz = 3 };
Shniz(p);
Alternatively if you had:
void Shniz(Foo foo, Bar bar, Baz baz, Quux quux, Fred fred,
Wilma wilma, Barney barney, Dino dino, Donkey donkey) { ...
This is a far different case because all the objects are different (and aren't likely to be muddled up). Agreed that if all objects are necessary, and they're all different, it makes little sense to create a parameter class.
Additionally, are some parameters optional? Are there method override's (same method name, but different method signatures?) These sorts of details all matter as to what the best answer is.
* A property bag can be useful as well, but not specifically better given that there is no background given.
As you can see, there is more than 1 correct answer to this question. Take your pick.
If you have that many parameters, chances are that the method is doing too much, so address this first by splitting the method into several smaller methods. If you still have too many parameters after this try grouping the arguments or turning some of the parameters into instance members.
Prefer small classes/methods over large. Remember the single responsibility principle.
You can trade complexity for source code lines. If the method itself does too much (Swiss knife) try to halve its tasks by creating another method. If the method is simple only it needs too many parameters then the so called parameter objects are the way to go.
If your language supports it, use named parameters and make as many optional (with reasonable defaults) as possible.
I think the method you described is the way to go. When I find a method with a lot of parameters and/or one that is likely to need more in the future, I usually create a ShnizParams object to pass through, like you describe.
How about not setting it in all at once at the constructors but doing it via properties/setters? I have seen some .NET classes that utilize this approach such as Process class:
Process p = new Process();
p.StartInfo.UseShellExecute = false;
p.StartInfo.CreateNoWindow = true;
p.StartInfo.RedirectStandardOutput = true;
p.StartInfo.RedirectStandardError = true;
p.StartInfo.FileName = "cmd";
p.StartInfo.Arguments = "/c dir";
p.Start();
I concur with the approach of moving the parameters into a parameter object (struct). Rather than just sticking them all in one object though, review if other functions use similar groups of parameters. A paramater object is more valuable if its used with multiple functions where you expect that set of parameters to change consistently across those functions. It may be that you only put some of the parameters into the new parameter object.
Named arguments are a good option (presuming a language which supports them) for disambiguating long (or even short!) parameter lists while also allowing (in the case of constructors) the class's properties to be immutable without imposing a requirement for allowing it to exist in a partially-constructed state.
The other option I would look for in doing this sort of refactor would be groups of related parameters which might be better handled as an independent object. Using the Rectangle class from an earlier answer as an example, the constructor which takes parameters for x, y, height, and width could factor x and y out into a Point object, allowing you to pass three parameters to the Rectangle's constructor. Or go a little further and make it two parameters (UpperLeftPoint, LowerRightPoint), but that would be a more radical refactoring.
It depends on what kind of arguments you have, but if they are a lot of boolean values/options maybe you could use a Flag Enum?
I think that problem is deeply tied to the domain of the problem you're trying to solve with the class.
In some cases, a 7-parameter constructor may indicate a bad class hierarchy: in that case, the helper struct/class suggested above is usually a good approach, but then you also tend to end up with loads of structs which are just property bags and don't do anything useful.
The 8-argument constructor might also indicate that your class is too generic / too all-purpose so it needs a lot of options to be really useful. In that case you can either refactor the class or implement static constructors that hide the real complex constructors: eg. Shniz.NewBaz (foo, bar) could actually call the real constructor passing the right parameters.
One consideration is which of the values would be read-only once the object is created?
Publicly writable properties could perhaps be assigned after construction.
Where ultimately do the values come from? Perhaps some values are truely external where as others are really from some configuration or global data that is maintained by the library.
In this case you could conceal the constructor from external use and provide a Create function for it. The create function takes the truely external values and constructs the object, then uses accessors only avaiable to the library to complete the creation of the object.
It would be really strange to have an object that requires 7 or more parameters to give the object a complete state and all truely being external in nature.
When a clas has a constructor that takes too many arguments, it is usually a sign that it has too many responsibilities. It can probably be broken into separate classes that cooperate to give the same functionalities.
In case you really need that many arguments to a constructor, the Builder pattern can help you. The goal is to still pass all the arguments to the constructor, so its state is initialized from the start and you can still make the class immutable if needed.
See below :
public class Toto {
private final String state0;
private final String state1;
private final String state2;
private final String state3;
public Toto(String arg0, String arg1, String arg2, String arg3) {
this.state0 = arg0;
this.state1 = arg1;
this.state2 = arg2;
this.state3 = arg3;
}
public static class TotoBuilder {
private String arg0;
private String arg1;
private String arg2;
private String arg3;
public TotoBuilder addArg0(String arg) {
this.arg0 = arg;
return this;
}
public TotoBuilder addArg1(String arg) {
this.arg1 = arg;
return this;
}
public TotoBuilder addArg2(String arg) {
this.arg2 = arg;
return this;
}
public TotoBuilder addArg3(String arg) {
this.arg3 = arg;
return this;
}
public Toto newInstance() {
// maybe add some validation ...
return new Toto(this.arg0, this.arg1, this.arg2, this.arg3);
}
}
public static void main(String[] args) {
Toto toto = new TotoBuilder()
.addArg0("0")
.addArg1("1")
.addArg2("2")
.addArg3("3")
.newInstance();
}
}
The short answer is that:
You need to group the related parameters or redesigning our model
Below example, the constructor takes 8 parameters
public Rectangle(
int point1X,
int point1Y,
int point2X,
int point2Y,
int point3X,
int point3Y,
int point4X,
int point4Y) {
this.point1X = point1X;
this.point1Y = point1Y;
this.point2X = point2X;
this.point2Y = point2Y;
this.point3X = point3X;
this.point3Y = point3Y;
this.point4X = point4X;
this.point4Y = point4Y;
}
After grouping the related parameters,
Then, the constructor will take ONLY 4 parameters
public Rectangle(
Point point1,
Point point2,
Point point3,
Point point4) {
this.point1 = point1;
this.point2 = point2;
this.point3 = point3;
this.point4 = point4;
}
public Point(int x, int y) {
this.x = x;
this.y= y;
}
Or even make the constructor smarter,
After redesigning our model
Then, the constructor will take ONLY 2 parameters
public Rectangle(
Point leftLowerPoint,
Point rightUpperPoint) {
this.leftLowerPoint = leftLowerPoint;
this.rightUpperPoint = rightUpperPoint;
}

What's so great about Func<> delegate?

Sorry if this is basic but I was trying to pick up on .Net 3.5.
Question: Is there anything great about Func<> and it's 5 overloads? From the looks of it, I can still create a similar delgate on my own say, MyFunc<> with the exact 5 overloads and even more.
eg: public delegate TResult MyFunc<TResult>() and a combo of various overloads...
The thought came up as I was trying to understand Func<> delegates and hit upon the following scenario:
Func<int,int> myDelegate = (y) => IsComposite(10);
This implies a delegate with one parameter of type int and a return type of type int. There are five variations (if you look at the overloads through intellisense). So I am guessing that we can have a delegate with no return type?
So am I justified in saying that Func<> is nothing great and just an example in the .Net framework that we can use and if needed, create custom "func<>" delegates to suit our own needs?
Thanks,
The greatness lies in establishing shared language for better communication.
Instead of defining your own delegate types for the same thing (delegate explosion), use the ones provided by the framework. Anyone reading your code instantly grasps what you are trying to accomplish.. minimizes the time to 'what is this piece of code actually doing?'
So as soon as I see a
Action = some method that just does something and returns no output
Comparison = some method that compares two objects of the same type and returns an int to indicate order
Converter = transforms Obj A into equivalent Obj B
EventHandler = response/handler to an event raised by some object given some input in the form of an event argument
Func = some method that takes some parameters, computes something and returns a result
Predicate = evaluate input object against some criteria and return pass/fail status as bool
I don't have to dig deeper than that unless it is my immediate area of concern. So if you feel the delegate you need fits one of these needs, use them before rolling your own.
Disclaimer: Personally I like this move by the language designers.
Counter-argument : Sometimes defining your delegate may help communicate intent better. e.g. System.Threading.ThreadStart over System.Action. So it’s a judgment call in the end.
The Func family of delegates (and their return-type-less cousins, Action) are not any greater than anything else you'd find in the .NET framework. They're just there for re-use so you don't have to redefine them. They have type parameters to keep things generic. E.g., a Func<T0,bool> is the same as a System.Predicate<T> delegate. They were originally designed for LINQ.
You should be able to just use the built-in Func delegate for any value-returning method that accepts up to 4 arguments instead of defining your own delegate for such a purpose unless you want the name to reflect your intention, which is cool.
Cases where you would absolutely need to define your delegate types include methods that accept more than 4 arguments, methods with out, ref, or params parameters, or recursive method signatures (e.g., delegate Foo Foo(Foo f)).
In addition to Marxidad's correct answer:
It's worth being aware of Func's related family, the Action delegates. Again, these are types overloaded by the number of type parameters, but declared to return void.
If you want to use Func/Action in a .NET 2.0 project but with a simple route to upgrading later on, you can cut and paste the declarations from my version comparison page. If you declare them in the System namespace then you'll be able to upgrade just by removing the declarations later - but then you won't be able to (easily) build the same code in .NET 3.5 without removing the declarations.
Decoupling dependencies and unholy tie-ups is one singular thing that makes it great. Everything else one can debate and claim to be doable in some home-grown way.
I've been refactoring slightly more complex system with an old and heavy lib and got blocked on not being able to break compile time dependency - because of the named delegate lurking on "the other side". All assembly loading and reflection didn't help - compiler would refuse to just cast a delegate() {...} to object and whatever you do to pacify it would fail on the other side.
Delegate type comparison which is structural at compile time turns nominal after that (loading, invoking). That may seem OK while you are thinking in terms of "my darling lib is going to be used forever and by everyone" but it doesn't scale to even slightly more complex systems. Fun<> templates bring a degree of structural equivalence back into the world of nominal typing . That's the aspect you can't achieve by rolling out your own.
Example - converting:
class Session (
public delegate string CleanBody(); // tying you up and you don't see it :-)
public static void Execute(string name, string q, CleanBody body) ...
to:
public static void Execute(string name, string q, Func<string> body)
Allows completely independent code to do reflection invocation like:
Type type = Type.GetType("Bla.Session, FooSessionDll", true);
MethodInfo methodInfo = type.GetMethod("Execute");
Func<string> d = delegate() { .....} // see Ma - no tie-ups :-)
Object [] params = { "foo", "bar", d};
methodInfo.Invoke("Trial Execution :-)", params);
Existing code doesn't notice the difference, new code doesn't get dependence - peace on Earth :-)
One thing I like about delegates is that they let me declare methods within methods like so, this is handy when you want to reuse a piece of code but you only need it within that method. Since the purpose here is to limit the scope as much as possible Func<> comes in handy.
For example:
string FormatName(string pFirstName, string pLastName) {
Func<string, string> MakeFirstUpper = (pText) => {
return pText.Substring(0,1).ToUpper() + pText.Substring(1);
};
return MakeFirstUpper(pFirstName) + " " + MakeFirstUpper(pLastName);
}
It's even easier and more handy when you can use inference, which you can if you create a helper function like so:
Func<T, TReturn> Lambda<T, TReturn>(Func<T, TReturn> pFunc) {
return pFunc;
}
Now I can rewrite my function without the Func<>:
string FormatName(string pFirstName, string pLastName) {
var MakeFirstUpper = Lambda((string pText) => {
return pText.Substring(0,1).ToUpper() + pText.Substring(1);
});
return MakeFirstUpper(pFirstName) + " " + MakeFirstUpper(pLastName);
}
Here's the code to test the method:
Console.WriteLine(FormatName("luis", "perez"));
Though it is an old thread I had to add that func<> and action<> also help us use covariance and contra variance.
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/dd465122.aspx

Resources