I want to check preconditions on a base class so that I know subtypes will always use constructor arguments that are valid.
Let's take as an example a constructor that:
- takes 2 or more parameters
- takes parameters of different types
- for one parameter, it performs multiple checks (e.g. String is not null and not empty)
How would one best use the Guava preconditions approach in that case?
In a mock example like this: (this is contrived!)
protected AbstractException(String errorMessage, Throwable errorCause) {
super(errorMessage, errorCause);
checkNotNull(errorMessage,
ErrorMessage.MethodArgument.CANNOT_BE_NULL_CHECK, "errorMessage");
checkArgument(!errorMessage.isEmpty(),
ErrorMessage.MethodArgument.CANNOT_BE_EMPTY_STRING_CHECK,
"errorMessage");
checkNotNull(errorCause, ErrorMessage.MethodArgument.CANNOT_BE_NULL_CHECK,
"errorCause");
}
I end up calling super
before checking the arguments because a call to super
needs to be the first line of the method and, although I could do super(checkNoNull(errorMessage))
, I cannot do the same wrapping using checkArgument
because that returns void
. So the dilemma is:
- Where do I put the checks on all arguments? I don't want to create a Builder just for that
- How do I "group" checks as in a fictitious
checkStringNotNullAndNotEmpty()
- Should I rather think about integration with matchers frameworks? (hamcrest, fest assertions...)
I use the odd-looking ErrorMessage.MethodArgument.CANNOT_BE_NULL_CHECK because the default throw
does not include an error message so from the testing side I cannot recognise this as an argument validation failure rather than a "any" NPE?
Am I doing it all wrong?
Exception
discovers incorrect constructor arguments? You cannot throw validation exception, as this will discard the original problem that caused you to throw the first exception...AbstractException
that is, with an insufficiently descriptive error message (e.g. null, "", ...) than the framework throws on the attempt of creating the exception to protect a framework precondition (i.e. all exceptions can be logged because they have a message, can be filtered... an example of filtering is the fact that I require a non-null check to say it is one: ErrorMessage.MethodArgument.CANNOT_BE_NULL_CHECK)