Contracts are general OOP that defines what an object does.
For example, I'll write a method:
public boolean test(Person p);
Let's face it, the method isn't going to convey anything useful of value with no documentation. So that's what we mean by a contract - we define the method with what it does in its documentation, and we follow the contract (obey what we document).
/**
* This method takes a Person and decides whether
* (s)he's old enough to wear pyjamas.
* @param p
* Any person object, or <tt>null</tt>. The method
* will not throw an exception even if the input
* parameter is <tt>null</tt>.
* @returns
* Whether p.getAge > 15 is true.
*/
public boolean test(Person p);
There you have it, a simple contract, which defines: - Expected input - Expected output - Presence of side effects, what they are, etc.
Well when you build interfaces one thing to keep in mind is that they should have a purpose.
It's called Liskov principal or something. single-class-single-purpose stuff. So by documenting the methods of an interface and stating clearly what's supposed to happen, you'll have a well-defined contract.
person who build interfaces, also provides the implementation that follows the documentation mentioned for that interface, right? so to whom is this contract implied on? as a user i will use the interface ref variable and instantiate their implementations. To just instantiate and use their implementations, where is the necessity of following contract(obeying doc)?
@overexchange You're right. There's none. It's a design purpose thing. Actually, I'll elaborate on contracts:
If you have a method with a well defined contract, other methods will rely on your contract instead of the implementation detail. So you can change whatever code's inside public boolean test(Person p);, it really doesn't matter.
However the thing about contracts are that for all correct inputs, the expected values are expected to be returned (duh), and when it doesn't, the contract's broken.
i could have done the same with interface keyword, if i dont have common implementations, somehow i still feel i dont know why interface keyword is used
I'll add you in a bit, I actually did this in a bad timing, I got off school, went to buy more biscuits and went on a marathonic code session, only remembered to add Vog earlier :|
@Unihedron people align this word called contract with usage of keyword interface, which confuses me. i don't see any use of interface keyword until a case of multiple inheritance between a single subtype and multiple super types.
@overexchange Well think of it this way, interfaces are kind of useless, isn't it? It defines methods which the class doesn't have to do anything functional.
Actually, most classes are so lazy they just use:
method {
throw new OperationNotSupportedException();
}
Hence, contracts exists so that classes implementing such interfaces has a baseline to follow. Not that they have to follow the contract, but that for all callers of classes of the interface, they depend on the contract, not just the method.
@overexchange you define a common interface. Sometimes that's in between different programs, sometimes between program sections, sometimes even just between two people to make clear what they want
@Unihedron Hmm dunno if there's anything I want a training lesson in right now... I just woke up so I won't really be able to take the information in atm. But I kninda already knew about interfaces and abstract classes so it was a good read confirming what I knew. ^^
But in real life cases where you go to work / build a moderate+ sized project / deal with bosses where a PM reviews your code / whatever, the code is no longer private, where it actually matters. Generally, it's divided into collaborative coding (project) or commercial- whatever, forgot the word.
@Vogel612 I'm not sure whether Mechanize is actually good though. I do have negative experience with it in the past, but if it's worth switching into for jSEchat, I might take a try.
Say, we're going to have to deal with STORAGE UNITS. Of course, SQL comes to mind, but say we want to support BOTH SQL and Flatfile AND SLAPI (java.io.Serializeable) AND lots of other nifty storage units (yes even XML externalization).
What you would think is to make an abstract class. This is a bad idea. Here's why:
abstract class AbstractDatabaseManager {
// Default fields
// Default methods
// Abstract methods, expected to use default methods as "plugs" to work altogether
}
From there you will lack a proper contract: Methods are very hacky and it's very hard to get anything done properly.
With an interface, you can define behaviour over implementation, so like this:
@overexchange Yes, when you work with abstract classes, default behaviour is supplied, but the work around requiring the methods that work outside the class to supply useful information queryAllUsers(), adminsFromUserIdRanges() will require the "hooks" (default behaviour in predefined methods), which hinders reliable development.
Because this relies on implementation details, which changes constantly.
@overexchange Yes, but not the other way around. Interfaces are generally preferred over abstract classes because they are contract-specific over implementation-specific.
To explain that, we will have to dig through a lot of practical uses and potentially write over two pages of transcripts.
I know you are eager to learn, but it's like 2 AM over here right now.
@KrisGroove alert, fundamental misconception -- you never encrypt strings, you encrypt byte streams; and what bytes a String ends up being depends on the encoding you use
when one says "abstract classes" it revolves actually using the abstract class as an abstract class - partial fields present, expected methods (usually very few), and predefined constants, like a part from a pie graph.
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@overexchange hold on; one thing you need to know is that methods in a Java interface are by default public abstract; as such they are not different from such declarations in abstract classes, except that the visibility modifier is fixed
@overexchange another technical difference when it comes to Java is that you can only extends one class (be it abstract or otherwise), but you can implements more than one interface
@Unihedron indeed, that can be made into an interface, but now a step back needs to be made and question the reason why the abstract class exists in the first place
@overexchange mind you, implementing multiple interfaces is not very common, but in Java there are very common usage scenarios when using it simplifies your life greatly
@fge i would need, for example, currently i have a code where there is an interface of thread pool creation/maintenance/deletion behaviour that is actually implemented during jdk 1.2 times. now we want to implement same behaviour using jdk 1.5 thread pool library.
do u think that jdk 1.2 time interface would help us guide what methods to implement and how that methods should behave, is that correct?
@Kylar The only thing you technically should do, is to put it within quotation marks if you are quoting. People tend to be a bit anal with the words when you mention quotes that refer to existing expressions within whatever they're doing ;P
What are you talking about? I'm awesome. I work at the greatest company in the world. Everyone uses my software. I have awesome kids. And I'm well managing my alcoholism.
I keep getting a NullPointerException when I try this query:
Cursor cursor = sqLiteDatabase.query("collection", new String[] { "SELECT interval WHERE MIN(time) FROM collection" }, null, null,
null, null, null); // This is where the NPE is.
cursor.moveToFirst(); /...