The term "singleton" as it is defined in Spring beans is quite different from an actual singleton.
There's a big difference between only ever having one of an object type, and having and object that can only ever have on of its kind.
In spring beans, you can define a Bean and by default it'd be "singleton", but you can define other beans of the same type
A real singleton is one with a private constructor and a static getInstance() method, that ensures that whatever you do, you'll always get the same instance.
Yes, but it's still effectively a way of creating a singleton. The idea is based on IoC and DI. I have not put any value into if it's a good or bad thing. Better than the singleton pattern
@Gemtastic The primary example is globally sharing a global database connection as a Singleton. It makes sense as a Spring bean because you normally only need one set of credentials/connection pool, but in the case you need to connect to another database, you're screwed if you have a real Singleton.
It's still a way to achieve a singleton, but without the restrictions that a design pattern singleton has where it's absolutely impossible to create a new one.
Yes, but it's still effectively a way of creating a singleton. The idea is based on IoC and DI. I have not put any value into if it's a good or bad thing. Better than the singleton pattern
3. In this case it's particularly clear that you need a database, because it's in the function's name, but what if I had named it grabPerson()?
@Gemtastic Again, Spring doesn't create Singeltons, because Singletons by definition have either zero or one instances of themselves in the problem space at any give time.
Spring shares the same bean across any method that requests it, and you still need to declare it either with a constructor argument, an annotation (ew) or a method parameter.
@Gemtastic If you, without Spring, create only one IndexController and pass it around throughout your object graph.
@MadaraUchiha there, requirement is just to maintain a single instance throughout the application. So, I think for such a situation, singleton is more handy
@MadaraUchiha Tell me, what are you getting at? What is it in what I'm saying that you think I'm not getting because you don't seem to understand what I'm saying at all.
While it might be safe in the sense of that no two threads can access it at the same time, there's nothing controlling which thread gets to it first and if that matters... Huston we have a problem.
It's got the same classes, same interfaces, same inheritance, same (sigh) statics, same visibility (save for package visible, because PHP has no packages)
My daughter got an ornament with coco mix and marshmallows in it, I'm trying to get it all out, but they don't want to come out, and I don't want to damage the ornament
room topic changed to Java::chat (Civil War): Room dedicated to the Java programming language and yummy food. And no, Android is NOT Java (does not use the Java VM, runtime environment and base SDKs differ, etc). And no, Javascript is NOT Java either. -_- Neither are chips. [fun] [its-always-friday] [java] [jvm] [my-code-is-compiling] [no-copyright-infringement] [out-of-context-stars] [serious-business] [type-erasure]