How can I go about populating a simple Java object with data from any other arbitrary object?
For example, I can end up with a Document
object whose children nodes I can iterate through and I want to set same-named properties in another object with the node's values.
I work primarily in dynamic languages and I think I am hung up on how this would work in perl or javascript and can't get my head out of the dynamic gutter long enough to see this clearly.
I know I could do something like (pseudo code)
while (key = nextKey) {
if (key.name == "fooBar") {
object.setFooBar(key.value);
} else if (key.name == "bazQux") {
object.setBazQux(key.value);
}
...etc...
}
But that just doesn't feel good, and feels awful when the number of properties or complexity increases.
In a dynamic language, i would do something like:
while (key = nextKey) {
object.setField(key.name, key.value);
// or even
object.[key.name] = key.value;
}
where setField
could be a dispatch table with code references. I know I don't have the luxury of every object being a hash by default, but I'm looking for general advice. How would you do it?
A switch/case would be a little better, but java complains about it not enjoying Strings in such statements. Would enums be a solution? </blind stabbing for answers>
I've looked into using reflection in order to implement some sort of automatic dispatch table, but that strikes me as being looked down upon and that there has to be a better way.
Thanks for any insight.