Recently I have read some articles saying that methods having side effects is not good. So I just want to ask if my implementation here can be categorized as having side effect.
Suppose I have a SecurityGuard
which checks to see if he should allow a customer to go to the club or not.
The SecurityGuard
either has only list of validNames or list of invalidNames, not both.
- if the
SecurityGuard
has only validNames, he only allows customer whose name on the list. - if the
SecurityGuard
has only invalidNames, he only allows customer whose name NOT on the list. - if the
SecurityGuard
has no lists at all, he allows everyone.
So to enforce the logic, on setter of each list, I reset the other list if the new list has value.
class SecurityGaurd {
private List<String> validNames = new ArrayList<>();
private List<String> invalidNames = new ArrayList<>();
public void setValidNames(List<String> newValidNames) {
this.validNames = new ArrayList<>(newValidNames);
// empty the invalidNames if newValidNames has values
if (!this.validNames.isEmpty()) {
this.invalidNames = new ArrayList<>();
}
}
public void setInvalidNames(List<String> newInvalidNames) {
this.invalidNames = new ArrayList<>(newInvalidNames);
// empty the validNames if newInvalidNames has values
if (!this.invalidNames.isEmpty()) {
this.validNames = new ArrayList<>(); //empty the validNames
}
}
public boolean allowCustomerToPass(String customerName) {
if (!validNames.isEmpty()) {
return validNames.contains(customerName);
}
return !invalidNames.contains(customerName);
}
}
So here you can see the setter methods have an implicit action, it resets the other list.
The question is what I'm doing here could be considered having a side effect? Is it bad enough so that we have to change it? And if yes, how can I improve this?
Thanks in advance.
IllegalStateException
if the developer tries to set one of the lists while the other exists.