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13:16
Good morning, Java!
fge
fge
Good morning milord
How are you @fge?
fge
fge
13:41
@Michael fine, I suppose
@fge You suppose?
fge
fge
Well, I'm not ill ;)
What about you?
Pretty good, thanks.
I am trying to add dependency injection to my project.
fge
fge
Ah, that
I have trouble with DI
Although, it's not really dependency injection because none of the objects depend on each other.
fge
fge
13:44
I fail to find relevant "injection points"
I want to do that for -validator 3.0 as well
What's that?
fge
fge
What, "that"? Injection points?
Validator 3.0
Ah ok.
For my project, I basically just need a way of accessing certain objects all over the application.
I'm thinking of just creating my own class that holds a list of these objects
Then, add a "get(Class)" method to get the instances.
fge
fge
13:53
You can also use a Supplier<T> (if you use Guava or Java 8)
But that means one instance per class
The advantage is that it is up to you whether you want to return a new instance/the same one/etc
That sounds like exactly what I need.
I need it to return the same instance.
fge
fge
JSR 301 defines Provider which is nearly the same
Here is my class:
public class AppContext {
	private static AppContext INSTANCE;

	private final List<Object> objects;

	private AppContext(Object... objects) {
		this.objects = Arrays.asList(objects);
	}

	public static synchronized AppContext init(Object... objects) {
		INSTANCE = new AppContext(objects);
		return INSTANCE;
	}

	public static synchronized AppContext instance() {
		return INSTANCE;
	}

	public <T> T get(Class<T> clazz) {
		for (Object object : objects) {
			if (clazz.isInstance(object)) {
				return clazz.cast(object);
fge
fge
Not sure how/when you initialize it but you could make a .getSupplier() indeed
It's initialized in the main() method before the program starts.
fge
fge
13:59
I take it you don't need all objects everywhere
fge
fge
Well, if you use JSR 301 you can make this class return Providers
The advantage is that during tests you can provide what you want
I have the unit testing situation pretty well under control.
I've converted as much of the app as I can to use the Presenter First design pattern.
This allows me to unit test a lot of the code and mock-out the GUI portions.
fge
fge
Uh, GUI
Something I have always sucked at
14:15
Presenter first makes writing GUIs a lot easier
@fge Eh, nothing I can really do about it.
fge
fge
Pity you use Java 6 only
@fge Oooo nice, thanks.
fge
fge
Returns a long though, but you use it with longs anyway
Yeah.
fge
fge
(if I were pedantic I'd say that it should even be TimeUnit.DAYS.toMillis(1L))
14:31
xD
fge
fge
github.com/mangstadt/emc-shopkeeper/blob/master/src/main/java/… <-- .getResourceAsStream() can return null
But OK, this is caught line 52 (eek! catch (Exception))
That's just me but I'd first catch RuntimeException before Exception
You don't have Guava has a dependency, do you?
github.com/mangstadt/emc-shopkeeper/blob/master/src/main/java/… <-- with Guava: return Optional.fromNullable(emcNameToDisplayName.get(emcName)).or(emcName);
@fge Huh? I don't call getResourceAsStream in that class.
fge
fge
@Michael line 49
@fge What class?
The link points to "BackupManager".
fge
fge
14:47
@Michael ItemIndex
Oh, that's because the file it's reading is on the classpath
So it will always be there.
So, if the file isn't there for whatever reason I want it to go crazy.
fge
fge
Even better, ImmutableListMultimap
Meh.
fge
fge
I tell you, once you use Guava there's no going back
github.com/mangstadt/emc-shopkeeper/blob/master/src/main/java/… <-- this class could benefit from TimeUnit too
What else is there besides multimaps and reversing a map so the values become the keys?
fge
fge
15:02
Uh, many things... Filtering, immutable collections, escapers, converters, base* encodings, ranges too
Where you create views with date ranges, this is a good use case for a RangeMap
For instance, if you have a range from, say, 2pm included to 3pm excluded, you can .put(2:30pm, someItem); it will associate it with the correct range
That's cool.
fge
fge
You can also retrieve a submap and a Map<Range<C>, V>
I used it in largetext, unfortunately my use case involved a lot of .get(int), so I had to create IntRange... But I do use Guava to fetch ranges: github.com/fge/largetext/blob/master/src/main/java/com/github/…
 
1 hour later…
 
7 hours later…
23:00
Hi there!
This is in reference to this question: stackoverflow.com/questions/23048931/…
My Series and Parallel classes do not explicitly inherit anything from my Circuit class, though because they are public classes, doing what I do in my main method as shown above still makes everything work. Is that the right approach..?
Hi. What are the public class ... lines from your Series and Parallel classes?
public class SeriesCircuit
{
And the same for ParallelCircuits
Ok, well I don't know how Circuit C=(Circuit)new ParallelCircuit(); would not give you an error. clone() returns an Object so it might work, but isn't correct.
I have not implemented the clone() method yet :/
Are there any common properties of series and parallel circuits? If not then Circuit can be an abstract class - it should define the getResistance method as an abstract method too
23:09
@fge Added jopt-simple to my project. It actually works really well.
SeriesCircuit contains two constructors. The first one: puu.sh/87ERE/7becec2787.png, and the second one: puu.sh/87ESA/b3e16475ab.png. As a result of those two constructors, I have 3 private vars
Circuit would be -

public abstract class Circuit implements cloneable

You would then implement public class SeriesCircuit extends Circuit implements Cloneable
ParallelCircuit only has one constructor, so its private vars are just these two: puu.sh/87EVa/be0094a31c.png
I see
Could you briefly explain what changing it to abstract class would do?
fge
fge
@Michael uh, for a GUI project? Or you have command line utilities in it too?
@fge Yes. It has some command-line arguments.
Thanks for suggesting it.
23:12
That looks OK. By making Circuit the superclass of both parallel and series circuit you can assign either type to a variable of type 'circuit'. An abstract class can not be instantiated - it serves as a 'placeholder'. For example, a "vehicle" class may be abstract while "car" and "truck" are concrete sub-classes. You can create a car or a truck but you can
't create a "vehicle", but in abstract terms both can "start" "stop" "navigate" etc.
Ah
Would my main method go elsewhere then, outside of all those three classes?
But within the same proj
I can now delete my ugly hack of a command-line parser. xD
Also, my ParallelCircuit and SeriesCircuit class would have to have super() in their constructors, yes?
Yes. Your main method is typically in its own class- in this case it could be 'resistance calculator' or something
23:15
yes
Well, off to dinner.
fge
fge
@Michael you could have written a HelpFormatter
And use parser.accepts("help").forHelp()
@fge I don't know, I kind of like how my current help text is formatted.
I have the arguments organized in a particular way.
Actually, if you don't call super() then java will do it for you - unless you call an argument constructor - e.g. super(withSomeVariable)
HelpFormatter just iterates through each option.
fge
fge
23:18
Yes, it'd be nice if it respected option declaration order
Otherwise, I would use it.

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