@ballBreaker You should! And you could either buy it (Not sure if it sells in your country) or read it online. There are many fan translations. You can check that on reddit under r/nagatoro
Say one has an abstract Car class with a derived Cabrio class.
From a REST api he recieves a JSON with data
abstract class Car {
int id;
String name;
String description;
Car({
this.id,
this.name,
this.description,
});
factory Car.fromJson(Map<String, dynamic> json, Strin...
@grrigore if I call cabrio.fromJson it would mean I need to have all the json['someProp'] set there, even the parent ones
which is redundant, if I do not want redundancy I should be able to just do it the way I have set it in my example
yet it returns an object without having set the derived class' properties, eventhough in the debugger at cabrio.fromJson it clearly sets the cabrio properties correctly
@grrigore setting json values to the properties can happen in the parent class. Car can set a bunch of it's parent's properties already so why would I do that in the derived classes as well. Seems redundant
imagine there is a parent class with 8 properties and two child classes with 2 properties by itself. Do I want both of the derived classes have a fromJson with 10 lines of code? No
so I let the parent class perform setting it's parent values and the derived classes theirs, as shown in the question
instead of cabrio.fromJson you set the cabrio properties inside the car factory method itself
which in fact wont be redundant but Im still bothered by why the fromJson on the derived class bring back the object without having these derived properties set. Despite all descussion on alternative ways that part alone remains a mystery to me
debugger shows the values are set, the cabrio.fromJson returns the object and 'poof' the derived properties are null again
@MarkO'Sullivan im aware of alternatives and packages but I would please like to focus on the "why" issue in my question. Im already using alternative ways so I can move on but the mystery remains
@MarkO'Sullivan I see but I didnt put a working example just a visual representation (simplified of my real-life situation) along with the problem. I was thinking of a workable one later but since I figured its an inheritance related issue I assumed the visual aspect was enough
typically we have at least 2 classes to represent one model. One class that is used to to parse the data from the backend, and then it is mapped to a domain class that is used in the rest of the app. Mapping one to the other is done in a separate mapper class. This way you can have the gson annotations for convenient parsing, and still have the 'clean' class to actually work with in the app. Maybe it is the same in flutter
thats nice, in fact I believe I still have to share the project with you
however when I started working on this project nullable was a rare thing, so thats not implemented since it requires a refactor and Im now focussed on getting everything working first
this problem im facing is on the sidelines, I continued with working around it: it's just an odd situation
because then Cabrio.fromJson would also need to have code to set the parent's properties like id : json['id'] and I thought with this way I'd save myself some redundant code
Yeah this won't work, within your fromJson, you're essentially saying return back an instance of Car, not of Cabrio so you never have access to the fields for Cabrio
@MarkO'Sullivan I took the point of 'parent class should not be aware of type' and now I just call the derivedClass.fromJson instead. But this does mean I have for example json['id'] stated in all derived classes.. I can't help but feeling thats a little redundant
but after this emerging discussions I might as well learn to have peace with it
she is doing her masters 'Media and communication'
so, I suggested to do a research about the (future) rules of AI. Where will the 'line' be drawn etc
but I can't confince her
and I have no idea about other subjects related to that studie
I have another one: research how closely related dopamine release is to a brain when recieving a 'like' or a 'stack-point' compared to nicotine or heroin or smth
A very old former airforce electrician who no one argues with expect me, while watching tv commented on a news which I knew was not true so I said its false, he said how can media lie, social media is full of lies
I said few days ago channel you are watching aired news about "mutual fight between workers of two political parties" but what actually happened was that party A workers were having tea when party B workers attacked them but all the public joined party A and started beating the attackers
no, he is a known genius, the effort they put on manipulating news here in super ai level, only young gen minds are capable of deciphering the truth out of it
some media channel journos are masters of deception, unmatched in the world
our media dept of armed forces, dg ispr, on record in a press conference said that our young gen is ill-informed because of social media, what should an old guy with very little interaction with social media would have made out of it?
it was just an example mwb don't panic I was trying to illustrate how intense it is here
I think its pretty common for older folk to get most of their information from news and for younger folk to get most of their information from online - its mostly just a byproduct of what's been available in their life
but I think at this point that's like extremely common knowledge