1

I have some code that processes fixed length data records. I've defined the record structures using java enums. I've boiled it down the the simplest example possible to illustrate the hoops that I currently have to jump through to get access to a static variable inside the enum. Is there a better way to get at this variable that I'm overlooking? If you compile and run the code, it converts each string into an XML chunk. I've done the XML manually so that the example is simpler, but my real code uses Java DOM.

EDIT: I've updated the code to a more complete example that I think better shows what I'm trying to do.

class EnumTest
{
    public static void main(String args[])
    {
        System.out.println( parse("ABC", RecordType1.class) );
        System.out.println( parse("ABCDEF", RecordType2.class) );
    }

    private interface RecordLayout {
        public int length();
    }

    private enum RecordType1 implements RecordLayout {
        FIELD1      (2),
        FIELD2      (1),
        ;
        private int length;
        private RecordType1(int length) { this.length = length; }
        public int length() { return length; }

        public static int RECORD_LEN = 3;
    }

    private enum RecordType2 implements RecordLayout {
        FIELD1      (5),
        FIELD2      (1),
        ;
        private int length;
        private RecordType2(int length) { this.length = length; }
        public int length() { return length; }

        public static int RECORD_LEN = 6;
    }

    private static <E extends Enum<E> & RecordLayout> String parse(String data, Class<E> record) {

        // ugly hack to get at RECORD_LEN...
        int len = 0;
        try {
            len = record.getField("RECORD_LEN").getInt(record);
        }
        catch (Exception e) { System.out.println(e); }

        String results = "<RECORD length=\"" + len +  "\">\n";
        int curPos = 0;
        for (E field: record.getEnumConstants()) {
            int endPos = curPos + field.length();
            results += "  <" + field.toString() + ">"
                    + data.substring(curPos, endPos)
                    + "</" + field.toString() + ">\n";
            curPos = endPos;
        }
        results += "</RECORD>\n";
        return results;
    }
}
1
  • I still don't see a reason for them to be static, they can be instance level and final
    – user177800
    May 19, 2010 at 22:16

3 Answers 3

1

How about this code in Java 8?

    // Java 8
public class EnumTest {
    public static void main(String args[]) {
        System.out.println(parse("ABC", RecordType1.class));
        System.out.println(parse("ABCDEF", RecordType2.class));
    }

    private interface RecordLayout {
        public int length();

        public static <E extends Enum<E> & RecordLayout> int getTotalLength(Class<E> e) {
            int total = 0;
            for (E e1 : e.getEnumConstants()) {
                total += e1.length();
            }
            return total;
        }
    }

    private enum RecordType1 implements RecordLayout {
        FIELD1(2),
        FIELD2(1),;
        private int length;

        private RecordType1(int length) {
            this.length = length;
        }

        public int length() {
            return length;
        }
    }

    private enum RecordType2 implements RecordLayout {
        FIELD1(5),
        FIELD2(1),;
        private int length;

        private RecordType2(int length) {
            this.length = length;
        }

        public int length() {
            return length;
        }
    }

    private static <E extends Enum<E> & RecordLayout> String parse(String data, Class<E> record) {
        int len = RecordLayout.getTotalLength(record);
        String results = "<RECORD length=\"" + len + "\">\n";
        int curPos = 0;
        for (E field : record.getEnumConstants()) {
            int endPos = curPos + field.length();
            results += "  <" + field.toString() + ">"
                    + data.substring(curPos, endPos)
                    + "</" + field.toString() + ">\n";
            curPos = endPos;
        }
        results += "</RECORD>\n";
        return results;
    }
}
1

Does RecordType1.LEN not work?

I don't have a Java environment at hand right now, so I'm preparing to wipe egg from my face, but since enum Foo is equivalent to class Foo extends Enum<Foo> I cannot see why you can't just access the static members in the standard way.

Edit: if you want to access static members dynamically, then this isn't going to work as you have to access static members based on the class rather than the instance, that's the point. You should probably do something like this instead, since if the behaviour changes depending on the subtype of the instance, that's exactly the kind of thing an interface is for:

class EnumTest
{  

    private interface RecordLayout {
        public int length();
        public int staticLength(); // give this a more meaningful name
    }

    private enum RecordType1 implements RecordLayout {
        ...

        public static int LEN = 3;
        public int staticLength() {
            return LEN;
        }
    }

    private enum RecordType2 implements RecordLayout {
        ...

        public static int LEN = 5;
        public int staticLength() {
            return LEN;
        }
    }

    ...

    private static String parse(String data, RecordLayout record) {
        int len = record.getStaticLength();
        System.out.println(len);

        ...
    }
}
12
  • The parse method is meant to be generic so that it can process any enum that implements the RecordLayout interface. In my actual code, there are many such enums. If I put RecordType1.LEN in my parse method, then it would be wrong if I called it with RecordType2.class as a parameter.
    – krick
    May 19, 2010 at 21:11
  • In that case, you have to add another method to the RecordLayout interface, since the generic type parameters are only little more than syntactic sugar at compile time. At run time, they disappear in almost all cases. May 19, 2010 at 21:14
  • 1
    Then the problem is that you are passing in a class (record) rather than an instance of record. If you passed in an instance of record you could call: record.length().
    – staticman
    May 19, 2010 at 21:15
  • If there is something you need to access from the RecordLayout interface, then you need to add it to the RecordLayout interface.
    – Ross
    May 19, 2010 at 21:17
  • 2
    @krick - then you're misunderstanding the point of static fields. If you want dynamic dispatch, then you'll need to make it an instance-level method (ideally on the RecordLayout interface) and have the different implementations of this method point to the relevant static fields. Static fields are when you want to refer to something... well, statically, as in "always the same". May 19, 2010 at 21:20
0

As long as you are inside the EnumTest class, you can access the LEN field by simply writing:

int len = RecordType1.LEN;

From the outside, it's still difficult.

0

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