Ok, this question is gonna get a lot of downvotes...
I just saw this question where a guy is facing some issue with spring xml beanfactory thing.
I would like to understand why this:
<bean id="sessionFactory" class="org.springframework.orm.hibernate4.LocalSessionFactoryBean">
<property name="namingStrategy">
<ref bean="namingStrategy"/>
</property>
<property name="mappingResources">
<list>
<!--<value>genericdaotest/domain/Person.hbm.xml</value>-->
</list>
</property>
<property name="hibernateProperties">
<props>
<prop key="hibernate.dialect">org.hibernate.dialect.HSQLDialect</prop>
<prop key="hibernate.show_sql">true</prop>
<prop key="hibernate.hbm2ddl.auto">create</prop>
</props>
</property>
<property name="dataSource">
<ref bean="dataSource"/>
</property>
</bean>
should be anyhow better than this:
public class BeanFactory {
public LocalSessionFactoryBean getSessionFactory() {
LocalSessionFactoryBean bean = new LocalSessionFactoryBean();
bean.setNamingStrategy(getNamingStrategy());
bean.setMappingResources(Arrays.asList(getPerson());
bean.setHibernateProperties(new Properties() {{
setProperty("hibernate.dialect", "org.hibernate.dialect.HSQLDialect");
setProperty("hibernate.show_sql", "true")
setProperty("hibernate.hbm2ddl.auto", "create");
}});
bean.setDataSource(getDataSource());
return bean;
}
}
It's shorter, it's easier to understand, it doesn't have Spring quirks, it doesn't require an external library to run (that may clash with others), it's step-by-step debuggable, it' unit testable, it doesn't need reflection, it potentially benefits of OOP, it's easier to refactor from your IDE, it's type checked at compile time, it's Java -not xml- and doesn't require to be parsed at runtime, when it compiles you know already that it is formally correct (and not discovering exceptions at runtime), and if you need to externalize some configuration parameter you use a properties file (that will contain real configuration).
And more than everything: I don't need a huge singleton class called "BeanFactory" in my code who's responsibility is to instantiate every kind of objects (like a huge and ugly service locator that has nothing to do with IoC principles).
So, the question is:
why should I prefer creating a huge XML over creating my objects composing and aggregating them in Java?