I have to implement a multiple producers / multiple consumers example application for a university course and have a hard time to find a solution for the following problem, that doesn't make me feel, that I do something wrong ;)
I have to implement a Producer
which produces a given kind of Component
(CPUComponent
, MainboardComponent
. All subclasses of a common Component
class). Each instance of a Producer
will only produce a given amount of one type of component (e.g. only Mainboards) and then quits.
The Component
s are all more or less immutable objects (only final
fields) and all logic is implemented in the common base class Component
(simplified below)
public abstract class Component implements Serializable
{
private final long id;
public Component(int id) { ... }
public long getId()
{
return id;
}
}
The subclasses of Component
are merely primitive, like
public class CPUComponent extends Component
{
public CPUComponent(long id) { ... }
}
With the language being Java, I cannot solve this object generation easily with Generics (as I would be able to in C#, because I cannot instantiate new objects of generic type parameters in Java). So I started to implement a Factory
public interface ComponentFactory {
Component createComponent(Producer producer, boolean defective);
}
And provide concrete factory implementations for each Component
type.
The problem I have now is that, when I want to store the produced components in my Storage
class (just manages all produced components for the consumers), I need to figure out the exact type of the objects (every CPUComponent
, etc. in it's own shelf), but I only get a Component
(base type) from the factory.
So the only thing that would help now, would be instanceof
, but I think there has to be a better solution for my problem.
The other solution I can think of would be to implement a Producer
s for each type of Component
, but I wanted to avoid that way.
Maybe I'm thinking way to complex and have already completely over-engineered the whole thing. Just point me in the right direction ;)
Component
s request a specific type of component (e.g. 1 mainboard), so I want to store them separately and not in a singleCollection<Component>