@VinceEmigh If you previously have public T field;, and you need to limit access or limit the number of values it can have by filtering in the setter, you can just have void setField and T getField.
I understand that, but if we had get and set implemented into the JLS, the types could be infered, which was why I find it to be a neat system. I don't see any possible problems, so I'm not sure why Java hasn't done it
@Jefffrey This (boring and repeated and bad and unmaintainable and makes people laugh) method is exactly why Java is terrible and I can break most classroom programs.
If you gotta deprecate a method, your API wasn't strong enough to begin with. An API should be scaled, not changed. Deprecated methods build up until your API is messy enough to re-release
A public field is not worse than a getter/setter pair that does nothing except returning the field and assigning to it. First, it's clear that (in most languages) there is no functional difference. Any difference must be in other factors, like maintainability or readability.
An oft-mentioned adv...
> There are reasons to use getters and setters, but if those reasons don't exist, making getter/setter pairs in the name of false encapsulation gods is not a good thing.
it allows you to easily modify the api. but for just programming your own application which isnt an API (rather than an application), then its pretty trivial
@Jefffrey Then your definition of trivial is wrong and you should learn what it means. I quote myself: It allows for changing the getters and setters without breakingTM code. It adds to the thread stack. It encapsulates the call and lets you reflect it. It allows overriding with a proxy. It has an absolute reference as #, not . A FIELD DOES NONE!
@Unihedro You can change the implementation (for example change a linkedlist to an arraylist), but you cannot change the observable behavior. Changing the observable behavior is breaking clients, even if the compiler doesn't notice.
// before
public void foo(int x)
{
this.x = x;
}
// after
public void foo(int x)
{
if (x < 0) throw new Exception(); // this breaks old clients, because they didn't know about the exception before
this.x = x;
}
Its like you linked me to the JLS without reading it youraelf. The JLS and JVMS are different things, and even if it recommends using the Java API, it does not account for API terminology
Oh wait, it still doesn't compile, because the Java compiler does not unterstand the //before and //after comments, and you can't have two foo(int) methods! Also, I forgot to put the methods inside a class.
@fge It was never my intention to discuss Java. Breaking APIs is possible in any language. I just posted Java-ish pseudocode which clearly does not compile.
@fge My feeling is that a lot of developers don't understand the conceptual difference between checked exceptions (recoverable runtime errors) and unchecked exceptions (mostly program bugs).
> std::logical_error: Defines a type of object to be thrown as exception. It reports errors that are a consequence of faulty logic within the program such as violating logical preconditions or class invariants and may be preventable.
> std::runtime_error: Defines a type of object to be thrown as exception. It reports errors that are due to events beyond the scope of the program and can not be easily predicted.
Please suggest libs that re-implement Java serialization (with full support of final field assignment, transients, readObject(), etc.) with exception it serializes to human readable format (JSON, XML, etc.)
Category theory is used to formalize mathematics and its concepts as a collection of objects and arrows (also called morphisms). Category theory can be used to formalize concepts of other high-level abstractions such as set theory, ring theory, and group theory. Several terms used in category theory, including the term "morphism", differ from their uses within mathematics itself. In category theory, a "morphism" obeys a set of conditions specific to category theory itself. Thus, care must be taken to understand the context in which statements are made.
== An abstraction of other mathematical... ==
> Functors are represented by arrows between categories, subject to specific defining commutativity conditions.
ah
> In fact, what we have done is define a category of categories and functors – the objects are categories, and the morphisms (between categories) are functors.