Effective Java —chapters 2 to 5

ashkanent

Ashkan Entezari

Posted on November 4, 2019

Effective Java —chapters 2 to 5

Introduction

Effective Java is a book by Joshua Bloch about Java platform and its best practices.

Bloch is a professor at Carnegie Mellon University. He was formerly the chief Java architect at Google, a distinguished engineer at Sun Microsystems, and a senior systems designer at Transarc. He led the design and implementation of numerous Java platform features, including the JDK 5.0 language enhancements and the Java Collections Framework.

Many consider this book as a must read for any java programmer, many have it on their reading list and many keep it as a reference book and keep referring to it as their work on their java projects.

Recently I read this book which discusses different items (90 in total) about Java, organized in 12 chapters. I learned a lot by reading these items and decided to summarize all of the 90 items to better understand each of them and also to have a quick reference for future.

As part of summarizing the book, I had to simplify a few things, add more explanations a few times, remove a few things and elaborate more on a few items to better understand them. After it was done, I realized that it might be helpful for other people as well. If you haven't read the book and need a faster way to review all of its items (highly recommend to read the book itself) or if you have read the book and need a refresher, or just want a quick reference to a specific item, this summary can help you.

Plan

I will be posting the summary of the 90 items in three posts. Other than the chapter 1 which is introduction, in this post I have summarized chapters 2 to 5 (items 1 to 33).
In part 2 of this post I will include chapters 6 to 9 (items 34 to 68). In the final part, I will include the summary of chapters 10 to 12 (items 69 to 90). Note that this summary is based on the 3rd edition of this book which was published after release of Java 9.

If you found any issues, please let me know and I'll fix them. Without further ado, here is the summary:

2 Creating and Destroying Objects

Item 1

  • Use static factory methods instead of constructors
  • static factory method: a static method that returns an instance of the class
  • a few examples:
  FileStore fileStore = Files.getFileStore(path);
  Date date = Date.from(instant);
  BufferedReader br = Files.newBufferedReader(path);
  • benefits:
    • unlike constructors, they have names
    • compare this constructor: BigInteger(int, int, Random) w/ this static factory method: BigInteger.probablePrime(int, int, Random). Here it is more clear that we are returning a BigInteger that is probably prime!
    • they don't create a new object each time they are called
    • e.g. Boolean.valueOf(boolean) doesn't create a new Boolean object (this allows immutable classes —item 17)
    • Unlike constructors, they can return any subtype of their return type (the object)
    • e.g., EnumSet has only static factories which return RegularEnumSet if there are less that 64 elements, otherwise they return JumboEnumSet which is backed by a long array. User doesn't need to know about this and just uses it!

Item 2

  • Use builder when faced w/ many constructor parameters.
  • maybe for more than 4 parameters in a constructor! or when you know you'll have more class members in future
  • Compare these two:
 NutritionFacts cocaCola = new NutritionFacts(270, 80, 100, 0, 35, 27);
 // vs.
 NutritionFacts cocaCola = new NutritionFacts.Builder(270, 80).
                                calories(100).sodium(35).carbohydrate(27).build();
  • as you can see, builder is more readable, arguments are more clear (we know 100 is for calories), we don't need to pass unnecessary parameters for those we don't have a value for (passing default values like '0') and it is more scalable (imagine we had 14 parameters instead of 6!!)
    • Simple implementation of the above builder pattern:
  public class NutritionFacts {
    private final int servingSize;
    private final int servings;
    private final int calories;

    public class Builder {
      // Required parameters
      private final int servingSize;
      private final int servings;

      // Optional parameters, initialized to default values:
      private int calories = 0;

      public Builder(int servingSize, int servings) {
        this.servingSize = servingSize;
        this.servings = servings;
      }

      public Builder calories(int val) {
        calories = val;
        return this;
      }

      public NutritionFacts build() {
        return new NutritionFacts(this);
      }
    }

    private NutritionFacts(Builder builder) {
      servingSize = builder.servingSize;
      servings = builder.servings;
      calories = builder.calories;
    }
  }

Item 3

  • Enforce the singleton property with a private constructor or an enum type (preferred!)
  • a singleton is a class that is instantiated exactly once
  • try on of these approaches:
  // singleton w/ static factory (item 1)
  public class Elvis {
      private static final Elvis INSTANCE = new Elvis();

      private Elvis() {...}

      public static Elvis getInstance() {
        return INSTANCE;
      }

      // rest of class implementation...
  }

OR:

    // Enum singleton (preferred):
    public enum Elvis {
      INSTANCE;

      // rest of implementation...
      public void leaveTheBuilding() {...}
    }
  • only limitation w/ enum type is you can't use enum if you need to extend a superclass

Item 4

  • Enforce non-instantiability with a private constructor
  • sometimes we need a class that is a collection of static methods (like java.util.Arrays)
  • these classes shouldn't have a constructor (not to be instantiated). not writing any constructor will create the default constructor. the solution is a private constructor like this:
public class UtilityClass {
    private UtilityClass() {
      throw new AssertionError();
    }
    ...
}
  • the only side effect is that this prevents the class from being subclassed, since the subclass would not have an accessible superclass constructor to invoke.

Item 5

  • Prefer dependency injection to hardwiring resources
  • not every class needs to be singleton or noninstantiable. sometimes classes behavior is parameterized by underlying resources. In these cases we need to pass the resource to the class
  • One common way of doing this is passing the resource through constructor when creating a new instance
public class SpellChecker {
    private final Lexicon dictionary;

    public SpellChecker(Lexicon dictionary) {
      this.dictionary = Objects.requireNonNull(dictionary);
    }
    ...
}
  • DI provides flexibility and testability
  • in big projects w/ lots of dependencies, handling this can be a bit problematic. In this case dependency injection frameworks can be used to eliminate the clutter
    • such as Guice, Dagger or Spring

Item 6

  • Avoid creating unnecessary objects
  • this basically says don't create a new object when you can reuse an existing one!
  • One simple example:
String s = new String("hello"); // don't do this!
String s = "hello"; // this will reuse the string instead of creating a new one

Item 7

  • Eliminate obsolete object references
  • Java has garbage collection but in some situation we may leave an unnecessary reference to an object which prevents it from being garbage collected!
  • for example look at this stack implementation:
public class Stack {
    private Object[] elements;
    private int size = 0;
    // ...

    public void push(Object element) {
        elements[size++] = element;
    }

    public Object pop() {
        if (size == 0) {
            throw new EmptyStackException();
        }
        return elements[--size];
    }
    // ...
}
  • in this example, our stack cares about the first "size" elements of the stack although other elements are still referring to objects. Java has no idea about that those references are not needed. So it won't be garbage collected and we will have a memory leak here.
  • in this case we can do this elements[size] = null; to eliminate the obsolete reference.
  • another benefit of doing this is that if by mistake we dereference the object, it will throw an NPE

Item 8

  • Avoid finalizers and cleaners
  • as of Java 9, finalizers have been deprecated and replaced w/ cleaners
  • they are somehow like destructors in C++ and used to perform some cleanup before garbage collection happens for a particular object
  • they are both problematic, execution is not guaranteed, they can cause deadlocks
  • finalizers have even more issues, security issues (known as finalizer attacks) and they ignore exceptions!
  • what should we do instead?
    • best approach is to make the class implement AutoClosable and require its clients to call close() or even better use them in try-with-resource blocks

Item 9

  • Prefer try-with-resources to try-finally
  • there are many java resources that must be closed manually
    • InputStream, BufferedReader, java.sql.Connection, etc.
  • in these situations consider using try-with-resources because:
    • it is more concise and readable (specially if there are more than one resources)
    • in try-finally if the code in try throws an exception and then the code in finally throws another exception, there is no record of the first exception in the exception stack trace
  • to be usable w/ this construct, a resource must implement AutoClosable
    • many classes and interfaces in Java libraries implement or extend AutoClosable
    • if you write a class that represents a resource that needs to be closed, make sure you implement AutoClosable too.
  static void copy(String src, String dst) throws IOException {
      try (InputStream in = new FileInputStream(src);
           OutputStream out = new FileOutputStream(dst)) {
               byte[] buffer = new byte[BUFFER_SIZE];
               int n;
               while ((n = in.read(buffer)) >= 0)
                   out.write(buffer, 0, n);
           }
  }

3 Methods Common to All Objects

Item 10

  • Obey the general contract when overriding equals
  • first make sure that you need to do that! in these cases you don't need to override it:
    • each instance of the class is inherently unique (like Thread)
    • there is no need for the class to provide a "logical equality" test
    • like java.util.regex.Pattern
    • a superclass has already overriden equals
    • e.g. most Set implementations inherit their equals from AbstractSet
  • if you override, you must adhere to its general contract:
    1. Reflexive: x.equals(x) must return true
    2. Symmetric: x.equals(y) is true if and only if y.equals(x) is true
    3. Transitive: x.equals(y) and y.equals(z) then x.equals(z) must be true as well
    4. Consistent: x.equals(y) must consistently return true or false
    5. for non-null reference value x, x.equals(null) must return false
  • usually it will be easy to follow this contract but if this doesn't happen we may break so many functionalities with Collections and other things.
  • There is no way to extend an instantiable class and add a value component while preserving the equals contract
    • one solution can be using composition instead of inheritance, or:
    • having an abstract class and overriding its sub-classes
  • When you have to override equals consider the following:
    1. for performance optimization use == to check if the argument is a reference to this object (if so, return true)
    2. use instanceof to check if the argument has the correct type (if not, return false)
    3. cast the argument to the correct type

Item 11

  • You must override hashCode when you override equals
  • general contract for hashCode:
    1. invoking multiple times should always return same hash value
    2. if two objects are equal (according to equals) then calling hashCode on them should return same integer value
    3. it is not required to return different hash values for different objects, but doing so will help with performance
  • if you don't override hashCode when you override equals, you can break item 2 above
  • to override the hashCode, you have to calculate the value starting from the first significant field, you add the calculated value of each field and result would be the hash value for that object
  • define an integer called result and for each field, based on its type calculate the value like this:
    • if field is a primitive type, use Type.hashCode(field)
    • if field is an object, use hashCode() on that function. (if it is null, use 0)
    • for arrays, if all fields are significant, use Arrays.hashCode, else calculate the value for each item in the array based on its type (one of the previous 2 steps)
  • add the calculated hash code c for each field into result:
    • result = 31 * result + c;
  • based on above explanations, for PhoneNumber class (has areaCode, prefix and lineNum) you can do this:
@override
public int hashCode() {
    int result = Short.hashCode(areaCode);
    result = 31 * result + Short.hashCode(prefix);
    result = 31 * result + Short.hashCode(lineNum);
    return result;
}
  • if performance is not a concern we can use Objects.hash() (previous example is still better):
@override
public int hashCode() {
    return Objects.hash(lineNum, prefix, areaCode);
}

Notes

  • the number 31 above: it is an odd prime, if it was even and multiplication overflowed, information would be lost. advantage of using a prime is less clear but it's traditional. also for the sake of optimization: 31 * i == (i << 5) - i
  • write tests for your hashCode, for example make sure multiple calls on the same object returns same value. if you use AutoValue you don't need testing it.

Item 12

  • always override toString
  • not as critical as last two items, but very useful and important
    • used by default when printing the object, logging, debugging, asserting, ...
  • by default all objects will return objectName + @ + hashValue (e.g. PhoneNumber@158b39)
  • general contract for toString is: a concise but informative representation that is easy to read
    • e.g. for PhoneNumber we can return 416-421-7373
  • when practical, toString should return all of the interesting information, otherwise a meaningful summary
  • always try to specify the format in a comment when overriding toString. if it is subject to change, specify that (like you add more fields in future or just change the format):
/**
* Returns the String representation of this phone number.
* The string contains 12 characters whose format is ....
*/
@override
public String toString() {
    return String.format("%03d-%03d-%04d", areaCode, prefix, lineNum);
}

Notes

  • if you show something in toString, provide programmatic access to it so user doesn't have to parse the string

Item 13

  • Override clone judiciously
  • if a class implements Cloneable, Object's clone method returns a field-by-field copy of the object ow it throws CloneNotSupportedExeption
    • highly atypical use of interface! instead of defining behavior for class, changes behavior of a protected method on a superclass
  • a class implementing Cloneable is expected to provide a proper Clone method
  • always call super.clone(); first. If your class only contains primitive values or reference to immutable objects, that's all you need:
@Override
public PhoneNumber clone() {
    try {
        return (PhoneNumber) super.clone();
    } catch (CloneNotSupportedExeption e) {
        throw new AssertionError(); // Can't happen
    }
}
  • but if class has other types, you have to fix them in Clone method after calling super.clone(). For example in Stack example that we have an array of object (Object[] elements;), calling super.clone() returns a replica in which the elements refers to the same array as the original, in this case we can do this:
@Override
public Stack clone() {
    try {
        Stack result = (Stack) super.clone();
        result.elements = elements.clone();
        return result;
    } catch (CloneNotSupportedExeption e) {
        throw new AssertionError();
    }
}
  • For more complicated objects it will get harder to create a proper copy:
public class HashTable implements Cloneable {
    private Entry[] buckets = ...;

    private static class Entry {
        final Object key;
        Object value;
        Entry next;

        Entry(Object key, Object value, Entry next) {
            this.key = key;
            ...
        }

        Entry deepCopy() {
            return new Entry(key, value, next == null ? null : next.deepCopy());
        }
    }

    @Override
    public HashTable clone() {
        try {
            HashTable result = (HashTable) super.clone();
            result.buckets = new Entry[buckets.length];
            for (int i=0; i < buckets.length; i++) {
                if (buckets[i] != null) {
                    result.buckets[i] = buckets[i].deepCopy();
                }
                return result;
            }
        } catch(...) {...}
    }
}
  • a better approach to object copying is to provide a copy constructor or copy factory
public Yum(Yum yum) {...}  // copy constructor
public static Yum newInstance(Yum yum) {...} // copy factory

Item 14

  • Consider implementing Comparable
    • when you implement a value class that has a sensible ordering
  • by implementing it, a class indicates that its instances have a natural ordering
  • by implementing Comparable, you allow your class to interoperate with all of the many generic algorithms and collection implementations that depend on it
  • the general contract for compareTo is similar to that of equals
    • sgn(x.compareTo(y)) == -sgn(y.compareTo(x))
    • if one throws exception the other one throws exception as well
    • x.compareTo(y) > 0 and y.compareTo(z) > 0 ==> x.compareTo(z) > 0
    • x.compareTo(y) == 0 ==> sgn(x.compareTo(z)) == sgn(y.compareTo(z)) for all z
  • if a class has multiple significant fields, start from the most to the least significant:
public int compareTo(PhoneNumber phoneNumber) {
    int result = Short.compare(areaCode, phoneNumber.areaCode);
    if (result == 0) {
        result = Short.compare(prefix, phoneNumber.prefix);
        if (result == 0) {
            result = Short.compare(lineNum, phoneNumber.lineNum);
        }
    }
    return result;
}
  • Comparator based on static compare method:
static Comparator<Object> hashCodeOrder = new Comparator<>(){
    public int compare(Object o1, Object o2) {
        return Integer.compare(o1.hashCode, o2.hashCodeOrder);
    }
};

Notes

  • in implementations of compareTo never use < or > and always use static compare methods

4 Classes and Interfaces

Item 15

  • Minimize the accessibility of classes and members
  • make each class or member as inaccessible as possible
  • Information Hiding or Encapsulation:
    • components communicate only through their APIs and are oblivious to each other's inner workings
  • Four possible access levels (most restrictive to least restrictive):
    1. private: only accessible in the class it is defined
    2. package-private: also known as default access, member is accessible from any class in the package
    3. protected: accessible from subclasses of the class where it is defined + any class in the package
    4. public: accessible from anywhere
  • by default everything should be declared as private, sometimes it is fine to make them package-private (like for testing) but moving to protected is a major change as they will become part of class's public API and must be supported forever!
  • it is wrong to have a public static final array field (or an accessor that returns such field):
// potential security hole:
public static final Thing[] VALUES = {...};
//
// one alternative can be:
private static final Thing[] PRIVATE_VALUES = {...};
public static final List<Thing> VALUES =
    Collections.unmodifiableList(Arrays.asList(PRIVATE_VALUES));

Notes:

  • default access is always package-private except interfaces where it is public
  • classes w/ public mutable fields are not generally thread-safe

Item 16

  • In public classes, use accessor methods not public fields
// Encapsulation of data using getters/setters (accessor/mutators):
class Point {
    private double x;
    private double y;

    public Point(double x, double y) {
        this.x = x;
        this.y = y;
    }

    public double getX() { return x; }
    public double getY() { return y; }

    public void setX(double x) { this.x = x; }
    public void setY(double y) { this.y = y; }
}

Item 17

  • Minimize mutability
  • immutable class is one that its instances can not be modified
  • all classes should be declared immutable unless there is a good reason to make them mutable
    • in this case we should limit its mutability as much as possible
  • follow these rules to make your classes immutable:
    1. don't provide methods that modify the object (mutators)
    2. ensure that class can not be extended
    3. make all fields final
    4. make all fields private
    5. ensure exclusive access to any mutable components
    6. e.g. if your class has a field referring to a mutable component, make sure it is private and when returning that through a getter, we can make a defensive copy
  • some of the advantages of immutable classes:
    • They are very simple
    • they have exactly one state, the one that was assigned at creation time
    • inherently thread-safe, require no synchronization
    • can be shared freely
    • these classes should encourage clients to reuse existing instances whenever possible
    • they can even share their internals (like BigInteger that has sign and magnitude, negative value share the same magnitude and have different signs)
    • they make great building blocks for other objects
    • specially as map keys or set elements
    • They provide failure atomicity for free
    • their state never change and there won't be any temporary inconsistencies or random failures!
    • you can use lazy initialization on some of its fields
    • e.g. hash value of an immutable object never changes, so if its hash value is requested we calculate it once and if its requested again, we just return that same value moving forward (better performance)
  • the major disadvantage is that they require a separate object for each distinct value
    • if you have a million bit BigInteger and want to change its low-order bit
    • there are different ways to cope with these issues, for example BigInteger has a companion package-private class that it uses to enhance its performance and memory usage while client can't see and use that mutable class.
  • simple example of an immutable class:
public final class Complex {
    private final double re;
    private final double im;

    public Complex(double re, double im) {
        this.re = re;
        this.im = im;
    }

    public double realPart() { return re; }
    public double imaginaryPart() { return im; }

    public Complex plus(Complex c) {
        return new Complex(re + c.realPart(), im + c.imaginaryPart());
    }

    ...
}

Item 18

  • Favor composition over inheritance
  • unlike method invocation, inheritance violates encapsulation
    • subclass depends on the implementation details of its super class
  • it is safe to
    • use inheritance when it is within the same package (controlled by same programmer)
    • use inheritance when extending classes that are designed and documented for extension (item 19)
  • in other cases, many things can go wrong that breaks your code, such as:
    • you wanna implement an instrumented HashSet that counts how many items have been added (not the size, including those removed). HashSet has add() and addAll() for which you can override and simply add number of elements to a counter each time any of these are called. Little you know that addAll() calls the add() behind the scene so if you add 2 elements to your set, counter will show 4!
    • sometimes they don't have these dependencies but in future updates the superclass may make these changes which still gives same input/output (valid updates) but it may break subclasses if they depend on these implementation details
    • let's say you have a collection with a few insert methods that you override them all to make them secure inserts and your clients use them. In future if that collection adds a new insert method your users can potentially use that new insert method and work around your security checks!
  • These issues won't happen if both classes are controlled by one person (team) or when they are designed to be inherited. This won't also happen when the superclass provides implementation details so you can be careful when inheriting it.
  • The best way to get around these issues and yet use the abilities of the superclass is to use composition. So instead of extending that class, you create a private instance of that class in your class and our methods can call the methods on this instance. (known as forwarding)

Notes:

  • Inheritance is appropriate only where the subclass is really a subtype of the superclass
    • when class B extends A, ask yourself is B really an A?

Item 19

  • Design and document for inheritance or else prohibit it
  • the class must document its self-use of overridable methods
  • use the java doc to include these details. Since Java 8 there are new tags including @implSpec that should be used of Implementation Requirements. The person overriding these methods should review these documents to make sure he is not breaking things.
  • The only way to test a class designed for inheritance is to write subclasses
  • Constructors must not invoke overridable methods.
    • this can lead to serious bugs, avoid it!
  • designing class for inheritance is hard work! you have to document all of its self-use patterns and then commit to them for the life of the class. If you change them in future, you may break other ppl code!

Item 20

  • Prefer interfaces to abstract classes.
  • as mentioned earlier inheritance has its own issues and when not necessary we better avoid them! In contrast interfaces don't have those issues and enable safe and powerful functionality enhancement
  • A class can have one super class but can implement many interfaces
  • default methods were introduced in Java 8 which let us change existing interfaces (still need to be careful). We add the new method with a default implementation, if it is not defined in the class implementing that interface, the default implementation will be used when needed.
  • We can also combine an interface with an abstract class implementing that interface to maximize the benefits. These abstract classes are known as Skeletal Implementation:
    • the way it works, you have your interface, you create an abstract class that implements that interface and provides implementation for the interface methods
    • now user can extend the skeletal implementation (their naming convention is Abstract*InterfaceName*) and for example only override one method and then use the default implementations in AbstractInterface for all other methods
    • if for example in another use case we need to override all the interface methods, user has the flexibility to just implement the interface directly (not using AbstractInterface) and override all methods
    • an example of this:
  /**
   * The Interface
   *
   */
  interface RedisConnection
  {
      int connect();
      boolean isConnected();
      int disconnect();
      int getDatabaseNumber();
  }

  /**
   * Abstract class which implements the interface.
   * This is called Abstract Interface known as Skeletal Implementation
   *
   */
  abstract class AbstractRedisConnection implements RedisConnection
  {
      @Override
      public final int connect()
      {
          //... lots of code to connect to Redis
      }

      @Override
      public final boolean isConnected()
      {
          //... code to check Redis connection
      }

      @Override
      public final int disconnect()
      {
          //... lots of code to disconnect from Redis and perform cleanup
      }
   }

  /**
   * A subclass which extends from the Abstract Interface
   *
   */
  class RedisOptOut extends AbstractRedisConnection {}
  • here if we don't need to redefine those interface methods we just extend the AbstractRedisConnection and will have those default implementations.

Item 21

  • Design interfaces for posterity
  • this item mostly talks about the default implementation of interface methods added in Java 8 (mainly to facilitate the use of lambdas)
  • although it is a powerful and helpful feature but we should be very careful and try not to change interfaces if possible
  • Java library has some changes to interfaces with new default methods that in some scenarios will break (like removeIf in synchronizedCollection)

Item 22

  • Use interfaces only to define types
  • When a class implements an interface that should serve as a type that can be used to refer to instances of the class
  • there are some cases that interfaces are used to hold constants which is wrong and should be avoided:
  // bad use of interface:
  public interface PhysicalConstants {
      static final double AVOGADROS_NUMBER = 6.022_140_857e23;
      static final double BOLTZMANN_CONTANT = 1.380_648_52e-23;
      ...
  }
  • this constant patter is a poor use of interface. Alternatives are:

    1. make these constants part of the class that needs them (as a member)
    2. use an Enum
    3. have a utility class to keep them:
    package com.ashkan.science;
    
    public class PhysicalConstants {
        static final double AVOGADROS_NUMBER = 6.022_140_857e23;
        static final double BOLTZMANN_CONTANT = 1.380_648_52e-23;
    }
    

then we can use these constants like PhysicalConstants.AVOGADROS_NUMBER. also if one class is heavily using these constants, in order to make it shorter and easier to use, we can use static import:

  import static com.ashkan.science.PhysicalConstants.*;

  public class Test {
      double atoms(double mols) {
          return AVOGADROS_NUMBER * mols;
      }
  }

Note:

  • the underscore in numbers above (since Java 7) is used for readability and doesn't change the value of the numbers or break them.

Item 23

  • Prefer class hierarchies to tagged classes.
  • tagged classes have a tag field that based on its value the class instance gets a different flavor. e.g.
class Figure {
    enum Shape { RECTANGLE, CIRCLE };

    final Shape shape; // tag field

    // these fields used only if it's RECTANGLE:
    double length;
    double width;

    // this field used only if shape is CIRCLE:
    double radius;

    /*
    rest is omitted for brevity: basically different constructors based on Shape and area() method with a switch(shape) statement that behaves differently based on shape, so on and so forth
    */
}
  • these classes are verbose, error-prone and inefficient (specially memory wise). They violate SRP and they are basically pallid imitation of class hierarchy
  • avoid these type of classes and replaces them with proper hierarchies.

Item 24

  • Favor static member classes over non-static
  • a nested class should exist to serve its enclosing class.
  • if a nested class will be useful in some other context, then it should be a top-level class
  • there are four kinds of nested classes:
    1. static member classes
    2. one common use case is a helper class that can be used in conjunction w/ its outer class. Like Calculator class can have Operation class inside and we can refer to its operations like Calculator.Operation.PLUS.
    3. if you declare a class that does not need access to its enclosing instance, make it static.
    4. non-static member classes
    5. these classes are associated w/ their enclosing class and need to be instantiated. One common use of these non-static member classes is to define an Adapter: this lets an instance of the enclosing class to be viewed as an instance of some other class (like viewing Map's values or keys as a collection view)
    6. anonymous classes
    7. they can be used anywhere that expressions are allowed
    8. they have limitations, such as can not be instantiated or we can't use instanceof on them
    9. before lambdas, they were more useful for creating small function objects and process objects but now wherever possible, we should use lambdas
    10. local classes
    11. they are the least frequently used
  • these four types should be considered 1 to 4, most to least preferable!

Item 25

  • Limit source files to a single top-level class
  • Java let us define multiple top-level classes or interfaces in a single file. This item basically says never do this, it is confusing, messy and can result in errors depending on how you execute your program:
// Animal.java —don't do this
public class Dog {
    ...
}

public class Cat {
    ...
}

5 Generics

Item 26

  • Don't use raw types
  • a class/interface whose declaration has type parameters is a generic class/interface
    • List<E> --> list of E (elements of type E)
    • List<String> --> list of String (elements of type String)
    • List --> raw type: list can contain anything (old Java)
  • main issue of raw types is we may get run-time exceptions. With generic types we will get compile-time exception if we attempt to put an incompatible type into our collection.
  // Raw collection type - don't do this:
  private final Collection stamps = ...;
  • here we can add something other than Stamp to this collection but later on if do something like Stamp stamp = (Stamp) stamps.get(0); and its first element is not Stamp it will throw ClassCastException
  • also we have to cast everything that we retrieve from this raw type collection. The correct way of declaring that collection is:
  private final Collection<Stamp> stamps = ...;
  • Wildcard types are type arguments in the form <?> which can have lower bound and upper bound. They are unknown types and give us some flexibility when working with types that we don't know and at the same time type safety so if we have List<?> myList then the only thing that can be added to this list is null (which is member of every type).

Item 27

  • Eliminate unchecked warnings
  • When working w/ generics you see many unchecked warnings. Eliminate every unchecked warning that you can and suppress the rest.
  • When you can't eliminate the warning but you can prove that the code generating it is type safe, suppress it with @SupressWarnings("unchecked")
    • use it on smallest scope possible
    • don't use it on entire class or a method declaration
  • every time you use this tag, explain in a comment why it is safe to do so
// Adding local variable to reduce scope of @SuppressWarnings
public <T> T[] toArray(T[] a) {
    if (a.length < size) {
        // This cast is correct because the array we're creating
        // is of the same type as the one passed in, which is T[].
        @SuppressWarnings("unchecked") T[] result =
            (T[]) Arrays.copyOf(elements, size, a.getClass());
        return result;
    }
    System.arraycopy(elements, 0, a, 0, size);
    if (a.length > size)
        a[size] = null;
    return a;
}

Item 28

  • Prefer lists to arrays
  • arrays are covariant, generics are invariant
    • Covariant: if Sub is a subtype of Super, then the array type Sub[] is a subtype of Super[]
    • invariant: for any two distinct types Type1 and Type2, List<Type1> is neither subtype nor a supertype of List<Type2>
  • arrays are deficient:
// fails at runtime
Object[] objectArray = new Long[1];
objectArray[0] = "I don't fit in!"; // throws ArrayStoreException

but this will give you compile time error:

// won't compile
List<Object> objectList = new ArrayList<Long>(); // incompatible types
  • arrays and generics do not mix well, these expressions are illegal:
    • List<E>[], new List<String>[] or new E[]
    • the reason is they are not type safe
  • when using arrays with generics, we may get compile errors or unchecked cast warnings. when this happens the best solution often is to use List<E> (replace arrays with lists)

Item 29

  • Favor generic types
  • generic types are safer and easier to use than the types that require casts in client code
  • we should design our code and types to be generic for this reason
    • as an example, this item changes the Stack implementation of Item 7 to use generics instead of Object
    • when we do this we will get one error in the constructor (elements = new E[...];)
    • it resolves it by changing it to elements = (E[]) new Object[...];
    • after this we will get a warning but we can justify that elements is internal and will be safe to do so, then based on Item 26 we suppress the warning.
    • takeaway: if we can avoid using lists (item 28) it will be more efficient to use arrays! otherwise as item 28 suggests, use lists.
  • Bounded type: when working w/ generics, we can define a type like <E extends Delayed> which means that we have a generic type that is a subtype of java.util.concurrent.Delayed. The advantage is that we can use methods of Delayed on elements of our generified class (which are of type E).

Item 30

  • Favor generic methods
  • same as classes, methods can be generic and we need to use them specially when we have a method whose use requires casting!
  • to make a method generic, you need to put the type parameter between method's modifier and its return type:
public static <E> Set<E> union(Set<E> s1, Set<E> s2) {
    ...
}
  • generic methods can be used in generic singleton factory pattern:

    private static UnaryOperator<Object> IDENTITY_FN = (t) -> t;
    
    @SupressWarnings("unchecked")
    public static <T> UnaryOperator<T> identityFunction() {
        return (UnaryOperator<T>) IDENTITY_FN;
    }
    
    // now we can use it on any type:
    Number[] numbers = {1, 2.0, 3L};
    UnaryOperator<Number> sameNumber = identityFunction();
    for (Number number : numbers) {
        System.out.println(sameNumber.apply(number));
    }
    // or (my example which "I think" should be correct and makes more sense to me):
    BigDecimal b = new BigDecimal("1234.1241234");
    UnaryOperator<BigDecimal> sameDecimal = identityFunction();
    BigDecimal b1 = sameDecimal.apply(b);
    

Item 31

  • Use bounded wildcards to increase API flexibility
  • parameterized types are invariant (two distinct types Type1, Type2 -> List<Type1> is not sub/super type of List<Type2>)
    • look at this Stack implementation (here only included the public API):
  public class Stack<E> {
      public Stack();
      public void push(E element);
      public E pop();
  }

we now add the pushAll() method to this class:

  public void pushAll(Iterable<E> src) {
      for (E element : src) {
          push(element);
      }
  }
  • since parameterized types are invariant, this won't work:
  Stack<Number> numberStack = new Stack<>();
  Iterable<Integer> integers = ...;
  numberStack.pushAll(integers);
  • although Integer is a subtype of Number but list of it is not! to fix it we need to change pushAll to this:
  public void pushAll(Iterable<? extends E> src) {...}
  • for the exact same reason, popAll() should be implemented like this:
  public void popAll(Iterable<? super E> dst) {
      while (!isEmpty()) {
          dst.add(pop());
      }
  }
  • <?> is a wildcard type and when used with extends/super is called a bounded wildcard type
    • <? extends E>: any subtype of E
    • <? super E>: any supertype of E
  • for maximum flexibility of our API, we should use bounded wildcard types on input parameters that represent producers or consumers
    • PECS stands for producer-extends, consumer-super
    • so pushAll() is producing (for internal stack) so it extends
    • and popAll() is consuming (from internal stack) so it uses super

Notes

  • do not use bounded wildcard types as return types
  • all comparables and comparators are consumers

Item 32

  • Combine generics and varargs judiciously
  • varargs (variable legnth arguments) was introduced in Java 5 (same as generics) but they don't work well with each other!
    • we can have a method like public void func(int... input) {...} and then call it like func(2); or func(1, 4, 3); etc.
    • when we invoke varargs, an array is created to hold the parameters.
    • as mentioned in Item 28, arrays and generics do not mix well!
  • whenever we use varargs on a method with parameterized type, we will get a warning (possible heap pollution warning). To fix this we have to do one of the following:
    1. make sure it is type safe and then use @SafeVarargs, or:
    2. replace varargs with a list (sth like item 28 to use list instead of arrays)
  • varargs methods are safe if:
    1. it doesn't store anything in the varargs parameter array, and
    2. i.e. we don't assign anything to the passed in parameter that is a vararg
    3. it doesn't make the array (or a clone) visible to the untrusted code
    4. for example getting the varargs parameter and returning it, so another code can get it, use it and break it

Note

  • @SafeVarargs is legal only on methods that can not be overriden (o.w. those methods may break its safety!)
  • use @SafeVarargs on every method with a varargs parameter of a generic or parameterized type (so users won't be burdened with warnings)

Item 33

  • Consider typesafe heterogeneous containers
  • Common uses of generic collections are like Set<E> and Map<K, V> which is a parametrized container that contains elements of one type.
  • Usually this is what we want but sometimes we may need a typesafe container that can store and return elements of different types.
    • we parametrize the key instead of the container!
  • before we take a look at one example, consider the following:
    • the type of a class literal is Class<T>:
    • type of String.class is Class<String>
    • when a class literal is passed around for type information it is called a type token
  • here is a typesafe heterogeneous container:
public class Favorites {
    private Map<Class<?>, Object> favorites = new HashMap<>();

    public <T> void putFavorite(Class<T> type, T instance) {
        favorites.put(Objects.requireNonNull(type), instance));
    }

    public <T> T getFavorite(Class<T> type) {
        return type.cast(favorites.get(type));
    }
}
  • a sample program to use the above container:
Favorites favorites = new Favorites();
favorites.putFavorite(String.class, "Java");
favorites.putFavorite(Integer.class, 0xcafe);
int favInt = favorites.getFavorite(Integer.class);
💖 💪 🙅 🚩
ashkanent
Ashkan Entezari

Posted on November 4, 2019

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