java实用程序_java面向对象设计之实用程序类

实用程序类一般都是包含的静态方法。它通常是用来包装一些的“有用”的算法。

StringUtils, IOUtils, FileUtils from Apache Commons; Iterables and Iterators from Guava, and Files from JDK7 are perfect examples of utility classes.

实用程序类的必要性

If you have two classes A and B, and have a method f() that both must use, then the most naive approach is to repeat the function as a method in both classes. However, this violates the Don’t repeat yourself (DRY) approach to programming.

The most natural solution is inheritance, but it’s not always beneficial for A and B to be subclasses of some parent class. In my case, A was already a subclass of another class, while Bwas not. There was no way to make A and B subclasses of a parent class without breaking that other relationship.

The alternative is to define the utility class: a public static class that sits in the global namespace, awaiting anyone to “borrow” them.

They are not bad in themselves, but they do imply relationships between your data that are not explicitly defined. Also, if your static class has any static variables, then A and B never really know what they’re getting into when they use it.

Disadvantage

However, in an object-oriented world, utility classes are considered a very bad practice.

The use of utility classes to be an antipattern. More specifically, it violates common design principles:

Single Responsibility Principle

A class should have one and only one reason to change

You can design utility classes where all of the methods related to a single set of responsibilities. That is entirely possible. Therefore, I would note that this principle does not conflict with the notion of utility classes at all.

That said, I’ve often seen helper classes that violate this principle. They become “catch all” classes (or God Classes) that contain any method that the developer can’t find another place for. (e.g. a class containing a helper method for URL encoding, a method for looking up a password, and a method for writing an update to the config file… This class would violate the Single Responsibility Principle).

Liskov Substitution Principle

Derived classes must be substitutable for their base classes

This is kind of a no-op in that a utility class cannot have a derived class. OK. Does that mean that utility classes violate LSP? I’d say not. A helper class looses the advantages of OO completely, an in that sense, LSP doesn’t matter… but it doesn’t violate it.

Interface Segregation Principle

Class interfaces should be fine-grained and client specific

another no-op. Since utility classes do not derive from an interface, it is difficult to apply this principle with any degree of seperation from the Single Responsibility Principle.

The Open Closed Principle

classes should be open for extension and closed for modification

You cannot extend a utility class. Since all methods are static, you cannot derive anything that extends from it. In addition, the code that uses it doesn’t create an object, so there is no way to create a child object that modifies any of the algorithms in a utility class. They are all “unchangable”.

As such, a helper class simply fails to provide one of the key aspects of object oriented design: the ability for the original developer to create a general answer, and for another developer to extend it, change it, make it more applicable. If you assume that you do not know everything, and that you may not be creating the “perfect” class for every person, then utility classes will be an anathema to you.

The Dependency Inversion Principle

Depend on abstractions, not concrete implementations

This is a simple and powerful principle that produces more testable code and better systems. If you minimize the coupling between a class and the classes that it depends upon, you produce code that can be used more flexibly, and reused more easily.

However, a utility class cannot participate in the Dependency Inversion Principle. It cannot derive from an interface, nor implement a base class. No one creates an object that can be extended with a helper class. This is the “partner” of the Liskov Substitution Principle, but while utility classes do not violate the LSP, they do violate the DIP.

In summary, utility classes are not proper objects; therefore, they don’t fit into object-oriented world. They were inherited from procedural programming, mostly because most were used to a functional decomposition paradigm back then.

Object-Oriented Alternative

Example1

Let’s take NumberUtils for example:

Utility Class

// This is a terrible design, don't reuse

public class NumberUtils {

public static int max(int a, int b) {

return a > b ? a : b;

}

}

In an object-oriented paradigm, we should instantiate and compose objects, thus letting them manage data when and how they desire. Instead of calling supplementary static functions, we should create objects that are capable of exposing the behaviour we are seeking:

OO Class

public class Max implements Number {

private final int a;

private final int b;

public Max(int x, int y) {

this.a = x;

this.b = y;

}

@Override

public int intValue() {

return this.a > this.b ? this.a : this.b;

}

}

This procedural call:

int max = NumberUtils.max(10, 5);

Will become object-oriented:

int max = new Max(10, 5).intValue();

Example2

Say, for instance, you want to read a text file, split it into lines, trim every line and then save the results in another file. This is can be done with FileUtils from Apache Commons:

Utility Class

void transform(File in, File out) {

Collection src = FileUtils.readLines(in, "UTF-8");

Collection dest = new ArrayList<>(src.size());

for (String line : src) {

dest.add(line.trim());

}

FileUtils.writeLines(out, dest, "UTF-8");

}

The above code may look clean; however, this is procedural programming, not object-oriented. We are manipulating data (bytes and bits) and explicitly instructing the computer from where to retrieve them and then where to put them on every single line of code. We’re defining a procedure of execution.

The OO alternative is:

OO classes

void transform(File in, File out) {

Collection src = new Trimmed(

new FileLines(new UnicodeFile(in))

);

Collection dest = new FileLines(

new UnicodeFile(out)

);

dest.addAll(src);

}

FileLines implements Collection and encapsulates all file reading and writing operations. An instance of FileLines behaves exactly as a collection of strings and hides all I/O operations. When we iterate it — a file is being read. When we addAll() to it — a file is being written.

Trimmed also implements Collection and encapsulates a collection of strings (Decorator pattern). Every time the next line is retrieved, it gets trimmed.

All classes taking participation in the snippet are rather small: Trimmed, FileLines, and UnicodeFile. Each of them is responsible for its own single feature, thus following perfectly the single responsibility principle.

On our side, as users of the library, this may be not so important, but for their developers it is an imperative. It is much easier to develop, maintain and unit-test class FileLines rather than using a readLines() method in a 80+ methods and 3000 lines utility class FileUtils. Seriously, look at its source code.

Lazy Execution

An object-oriented approach enables lazy execution. The in file is not read until its data is required. If we fail to open out due to some I/O error, the first file won’t even be touched. The whole show starts only after we call addAll().

All lines in the second snippet, except the last one, instantiate and compose smaller objects into bigger ones. This object composition is rather cheap for the CPU since it doesn’t cause any data transformations.

Besides that, it is obvious that the second script runs in O(1) space, while the first one executes in O(n). This is the consequence of our procedural approach to data in the first script.

In an object-oriented world, there is no data; there are only objects and their behavior!

References

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