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21:11
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Q: How to prevent JSF namespace pollution

Muhammad HewedyI consider JSF have a namespace pollution in which I have to expose private members to the world that I shouldn't do. Here's an example: Suppose I have a form with From data and To date input forms, which represented in the backing beans as: private Date fromDate; private Date toDate; // then ...

I don't really understand the problem here. You can mark the fields as protected if that's what you need. Or even better: provide the relevant code that's being executed that also needs the improvement.
Even protected still be visible by subclasses.
Then what's your problem with the current design? Your variables can be private and then access to them using the getter/setter. If you want to disallow the access to the fields to the subclasses then don't provide any getter for them. But you also state that the user may/have to fill these values from a <h:form>. And your question is how to fulfill all these requirements, right?
@LuiggiMendoza, I put some edit and repeated myself so it could be clear
@LuiggiMendoza, Yep this is what I want try to say!
Well. Your problem is completely unrelated to JSF. Instead, I may use a different class where I will store these Date values and inject it to the relevant managed bean it needs this data.
21:11
Sorry, I didn't get you
please provide where you have the problem
is in your managed bean or where?
please provide the relevant design of the classes to understand what you're doing
21:13
Okay
and a piece of JSF code where you want/need to retrieve the data
and how all this works with the other piece of code that seems to be from other planet
(because I don't know how you relate gettes/setters for fields with generics and all that stuff from basically nowhere)
I have this controller :
public abstract class StatisticsController extends BaseController {

}
which is a base class for all my Statistics Conrollers
and here's code from inside it:
public doInit(){
update();
}

public final void update() {
List<? extends StatisticsModel> dataModel = _getDataModel();

}
private List<? extends StatisticsModel> _getDataModel() {
List<? extends StatisticsModel> dataModel = null;
if (isPieChart()) {
if (isSelectOneDayChecked()) {
dataModel = getDataModel(get_fromDate(), get_fromDate(),
get_selected());
} else {
dataModel = getAggregatedDataModel(get_fromDate(),
get_toDate(), get_selected());
}
} else {
dataModel = getDataModel(get_fromDate(), get_toDate(),
get_selected());
}

if (CollectionUtils.isNotEmpty(dataModel)) {
return _fillDataModelWithMissingDates(dataModel);
And this the private method that is used in the update method that calls the abstract getDataModel method
Clear so far?
Note that, the getDataModel abstract method which have the following definition:

protected abstract List<? extends StatisticsModel> getDataModel(Date from,
Date to, String[] selected);
accept from and to dates
Where its values depend on many variables
which means that at some time from and to date might be same and might be different
Still here???
yes
but I have some work to do here as well
I'm reading the code
Sorry for interrupting you
and much appreciated your help
don't worry
21:23
Just let me know when I can continue
I don't understand
why you have these methods
get_fromDate(), get_toDate()
what are they supposed to do?
and how are they different from the fields fromDate and toDate?
its the getters and setters for the private insane fields fromDate and toDate
I use getter/setters here because of integration probelem in JSF with Spring
but it is the same as using the private ivar
oh you're using Spring
still, that's not relevant (yet)
21:25
Yep
so, get_fromDate() is a getter for fromDate field, right?
The ivar should have public getters/setters for sake of JSF beans
yep
the getter/setter is here because XHTML require that
because it binds to some calendar compoenet
please completely forget about JSF
I'm asking about your current design of the class
what's the solely purpose of get_fromDate method?
21:27
it is a getter
for the fromDate field
ok
and what's the difference between getFromDate and get_fromDate?
and the fromDate field being used mainly and execlusivly for JSF
same
if there's no difference
then why do you need both methods?
Ohh
look
getFromDate is only used in the question
it is not a real code
then please
21:29
I rewrote the code to be simple on the question
forget about the code posted on the question
provide the relevant code to understand your problem
otherwise we won't be on the same page
the code is what I posted here
in this chat
to sum it up..
I have 2 ivars, _fromDate and _toDate
and its getters and setters
get_fromDate, set_fromDate and get_toDate and set_toDate
and I have two methods, one private and being called in the post constructor and one abstract that should be implemented by the subclasses
the first method name is _getDataModel
the second method name is getDataModel
yeah
got it
21:32
the first method _getDataModel as appears, it being called getDataModel but after preparing its parameters
yes, I can see that
specially the parameters fromDate and toDate
what I still don't understand
is the difference between fromDate and _fromDate
21:33
can you put some description beside each one of time?
them*
like the fromDate param and _fromDate ivar?
you mean that?
you said you have a field called _fromDate
and its getter get_fromDate()
but you also have a field fromDate and its getter getFromDate()
Nope
to sum it up..
I have 2 ivars, _fromDate and _toDate
and its getters and setters
get_fromDate, set_fromDate and get_toDate and set_toDate
and I have two methods, one private and being called in the post constructor and one abstract that should be implemented by the subclasses
the first method name is _getDataModel
the second method name is getDataModel
I only have 2 fields
21:42
And this two fields made to capture the input of the user
using getters/setters
Yes
(for JSF rquirements AFAIK)
then the _getDataModel decide how they can be send these two fields values to the subclasses
if (isSelectOneDayChecked()) {
dataModel = getDataModel(get_fromDate(), get_fromDate(),
get_selected());
} else {
dataModel = getAggregatedDataModel(get_fromDate(),
get_toDate(), get_selected());
}
} else {
dataModel = getDataModel(get_fromDate(), get_toDate(),
get_selected());
}
If selectOneDayChecked then send fromDate ivar into both fromData/toDate parameter
and so on, as it is clear on the code above
to sums it up, some times the fromDate ivar (which is coming from user input), sent as toDate to the subclass method (getDataMode)
why are you calling it ivar instead of variable or field or parameter?
so from the perspective of some subclass of the StatisticsController:

the fromDate and toDate parameters is not necessarily equals to get_fromDAte and get_toDate parent methods
it is short cut for instance variables
field...
anyway
21:46
Okey, I used to say it that when working on objc
oh ok, don't worry
so you have the field
marked as private
My problem clear?
but still you have to use public getter/setter methods
It is a problem on the subclass
yep
and you dont want these methods in the super class
because somewhat this messes the design for subclasses
21:47
so the subclass doesn't got confused between them and the method parameters
yep
I seriously don't see the problem
You don't see this as a problem?
in subclasses, you cannot access to a private field of the super class
Okay, but you can call its getter
so if you have a method in the subclass with a parameter named the same as the name of a field in the super class
it means nothing
21:49
which is available for JSF sake
you can test this code directly
the problem happens when:
I'll give you some code from the subclass
public class SomeSubClass

{
protected List<? extends StatisticsModel> getDataModel(Date from,
Date to, String[] selected)
{
// do some logic with get_fromDate
// and get_toDate
// and don't user from and to parameters at all

}

}
this might happen, the subclass developer might ignore the parameters in favour of the the super class inhereited field's getters
Ani't he?
public class Main {
static int COUNTER = 0;
static class Foo {
private int value;
public Foo() { value = COUNTER++; }
public int getValue() { return value; }
}
static class Bar extends Foo {
public Bar(){ super(); }
public void doSomething(int value) {
System.out.println("The value is: " + value);
}
}
public static void main(String[] args) {
Bar bar = new Bar();
bar.doSomething(10);
System.out.println("The value or Foo#value for bar is: " +((Foo)bar).value);

Bar bar2 = new Bar();
bar2.doSomething(10000);
yes, he/she can
but if you simply don't want that to happen
and if these values are not relevant for all the beans
I want to prevent him from making mistakes
and JSF enforces me to put theses getters and setters
or "controllers" (when they're not controllers at all, the only real controller is FacesServlet, the managed beans are part of the View)
then it will be better to pass these values as parameters to the proper method
since I haven't seen any proper JSF code
21:56
I just browed the word controller from BlueC
I can't provide an answer
since I don't know the real purpose of these fields
all you want to do here is
I want to avoid that programmers do something bad
These fields is backing some calendar on the form
so the user can pick from date and to date from
are these fields relevant for all the subclasses of your controller?
I want to avoid programmers mistakes by writing bug-free code
mm, in some way.. yes
but it should never used directly by the developer
22:00
But if I am using another framework that doesn't enforce me to create getters/setters for fields just to bind them to the UI, I think such problem will not happen
Then JSF has namespace pollution
I don't think such framework should exist because it will promote bad practices
JSF works right
your design makes me a headache and personally I don't like it
still, for your problem
you could create a new class
that will hold this data
All ways, thanks for your time
`public class Period {
private Date fromDate;
private Date toDate;
//gettes/setters here...
}`
and use this bean to store/show the values in the view
22:02
ya, you are right
<p:calendar value="#{period#fromDate}" />
as an example
then, I will inject this instance in the bean I need
in that way, these fields are non-intrusive
also, use the proper convention for naming things in Java
Ya
What you mean by this?
the underscore? I made it just to try to hide it from the subclasses
avoid using _ for the names
that won't hide it
I think the encapsulated object it pretty good
Thanks for your time
you're welcome

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