if all you have is: "so .. emm .. I saw SQL query in your page, you should look for anything that could cause it" basically translates as simply sending a mail with "hey, your code might have a bug. tnxby"
a static method must not mutate private state of the class it is in. do we agree on that? because if that is the case, you should be using strategy pattern instead
private $shit;
static functon fromBaz($baz){
$obj = new self();
$obj->shit = 123;
return $obj;
}
I agree with @Patrick on that. The function is detached and has no cohesion whatsoever. I'd be fine with $fooFactory->fromInt() or even FooFactory::fromInt()
i for instance wrap factories into other factories and then again in other factories. in the end i just have simple functions. and you cannot do that with static methods
nobody gives a damn if you use a private method for some random delegation or as a shortcut for a simple operation, but if you have a big private method you are hiding it between other methods that use it internally, and you are testing it through those other methods, and the complexity of the code increases massively
not only that
but you probably also have duplicated tests, because you are forced to cover it through all the methods that make use of it private function x(){} functon a(){ $this->x(); } functon b(){ $this->x(); }
now if function x() was injected and tested alone, you wouldn't have to do that
you would have to test only what "a" adds to "x", and not the result of "a + x" together
@Wes but that's what he is saying too? If it does too much, extract it?
> It seems to me that some of the people that claim to be arguing against private methods are in fact arguing against issues that are orthogonal to private methods; you can violate SRP with and without private methods; you can mess with internal mutable state with and without private methods, and so on.
> Making private methods public don’t automatically lead to better design; it can also lead to an unnecessary inflated API, weak encapsulation, and increased maintenance overhead.
I am confused, the article seems to support my arguments ^^
> When you expose a method publicly, from that moment on you’re “forced” to keep that method working and honoring its contract; otherwise, your consumers will suffer with breaking changes in their code!
That's why I default to private
Default to private, make things protected and public when you have to access them from another scope
I used to favor protected but it will just lead to people overriding your stuff in unpredictable ways and then it's api or you break their stuff. it better to provide well defined extension points.
"default to private" is validating classes that contain private methods for the most part. that's bad for me a class serves a purpose to the outside world, not to itself, and that is done through public methods, not with privates. if you have mostly private methods then you cocked up something
the words i'd use are: avoid private methods and limit the number of public ones, according to ISP
properties should always be private in php instead
Limit the number of public ones I agree to. I like minimal interfaces unless it's a facade. but I dont see any value in limiting private methods. they help to structure your code. I agree though that having a lot of them might hint at an additional object wanting to come out.
what you are effectively achieving with "avoid privates" is that people will not structure their code because they think its somehow bad to have a private methods. and then you'll get these single public method objects with 300 lines of code in it.
Wow had some shit stuck in my eye for like 4 hours. tried poking/rubbing it out, washing it and all. Nothing. Read a tip to pull upper eyelid over lower eye lid and roll eye upwards. Worked like a charm! Eye pain liberation!
I recently wrote a class that uses a LoadingCache (java). I newed the cache in the ctor of the class and assigned it to a private property. It would store tokens. The class had two private methods that would operate on that cache. So far so good. Works. But by virtue of cohesion, it would have been better to create a dedicated object and moving the methods there and make them public.
That would be an example where the private method might have been misplaced, but it's much more an issue of responsibility assignments than of visibility
@Wes I'd like to note that global is an execution time statement while use () is a definition time statement. You need to bind the imported variables ahead of time, unlike global which simply looks up the global variables table upon execution.