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What is the best way from the OOP point of view to implement immutable classes for some indicators(parameters, variables) and their values.

Below there is pseudocode for the approach I am currently using

class Indicator
{
    private String key;   // Key
    private String desc;  // Description

    public Indicator(String _key, String _desc)
    {
        key = _key;
        desc = _desc;
    }

    public String getKey()  { return key; }
    public String getDesc() { return desc; }
}

class IndicatorValue extends Indicator
{
    private int val;

    public IndicatorValue(String _key, String  _desc, int _val)
    {
        super(_key, _desc);
        val = _val;        
    }

    public int getVal()  { return val; }
}
3
  • Is this supposed to be pseudo-code? Nov 5, 2013 at 15:06
  • @SotiriosDelimanolis Yes)
    – zavg
    Nov 5, 2013 at 15:07
  • It's almost fine, I would also declare the fields as final so their value cannot be modified inside the class either. Nov 5, 2013 at 15:10

1 Answer 1

2

If all you need is a pure data object, you don't really need encapsulation, which in Java requires quite a lot of boilerplate code. You can also have simple public final fields:

public class Indicator {
    public final String key, desc;

    public Indicator(String key, String desc) { 
        this.key = key; this.desc = desc; 
    }
}

In some specific situations the getters become necessary, but I wouldn't recommend starting your design with them. They should prove to be worth their weight.

2
  • there is a point from getters, when a i need to make the properties states immutable, in getters i return copies properties, but , i guess, OP doesn't need this.. Nov 5, 2013 at 15:14
  • @EugenHalca That's one of the points, yes. Other common cases are where you use a framework which insists on getters. Nov 5, 2013 at 15:16

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