2

Some code needs to be refactored in approx 10 classes, of these classes there are conditionals scattered throughout the classes painting text onto the screen where appropriate. I want to add all this code conditional/painting code into one centralised location. Is there a design pattern appropriate for this ?

if (fontWidth == 100) {
    fontSize = large;
} else {
    fontSize = small;
}

if (fontWidth == 100) {
    graphics.drawText("100", xVal, yVal);
} else {
    xText = Utils.calculateXText(param1, param2);
    graphics.drawText("200", xVal, yVal);
}

For delegation does it mean I need to write defferent wrapper objects, one for setting the font size and one for drawing the text based on above code ?

public void paint(Graphics graphics){

    super.paint(graphics);
    Font font;


    if(ScreenDimension.getFontWidth() == 320){
        font = Font.getDefault().derive(Font.PLAIN,10,Ui.UNITS_pt);
    }
    else {
        font = Font.getDefault().derive(Font.PLAIN,12,Ui.UNITS_pt);
    }

String strScore = String.valueOf(score);
    graphics.setFont(font); 
    int pixelWidth = font.getAdvance(strScore);


    if(ScreenDimension.getFontWidth() == 320){
        graphics.drawText(strScore, (int) (this.backgroundBitmap.getWidth() * 0.50) - (pixelWidth/2), 10);
    }
    else {
        graphics.drawText(strScore, (int) (this.backgroundBitmap.getWidth() * 0.50) - (pixelWidth/2), 20);
    }

    if(ScreenDimension.getFontWidth() == 320){
        font = Font.getDefault().derive(Font.PLAIN,6,Ui.UNITS_pt);
    }
    else {
        font = Font.getDefault().derive(Font.PLAIN,8,Ui.UNITS_pt);
    }

    int namePixelWidth = font.getAdvance(judgeName);
    graphics.setFont(font);

if(ScreenDimension.getFontWidth() == 320){
    graphics.drawText(judgeName, (int) (this.backgroundBitmap.getWidth() * 0.50) - (namePixelWidth/2), this.backgroundBitmap.getHeight() - font.getHeight() - 2);
}
    else {
        graphics.drawText(judgeName, (int) (this.backgroundBitmap.getWidth() * 0.50) - (namePixelWidth/2), this.backgroundBitmap.getHeight() - font.getHeight() - 15);
    }
}

3 Answers 3

4

You could use a delegate object that would inspect your 10 classes to draw the text appropriately.

You could also simply make a static helper function to execute that code (simple and easy way).

In fact it is hard to give a proper opinion without seeing more code.

0
1

You possibly want to use a Strategy pattern, defining something like

/**
 * Strategy to render some text, of two size variants, centered horizontally
 * at a specified position.
 */
public interface TextRenderer {
    public enum FontSize { LARGE, SMALL };
    public void render(String text, int x, int y, FontSize size);
}

/**
 * TextRenderer Factory that uses the ScreenDimension to determine sizes of LARGE
 * and SMALL fonts to use.
 */
public class ScreenDimensionAwareTextRendererFactory {
    public static TextRenderer getTextRenderer(Graphics gc) {
        Font baseFont = Font.getDefault();
        int fontWidth = ScreenDimension.getFontWidth();
        return fontWidth == 320
                ? new DefaultTextRenderer(gc, baseFont.derive(Font.PLAIN,10,Ui.UNITS_pt), baseFont.derive(Font.PLAIN,6,Ui.UNITS_pt))
                : new DefaultTextRenderer(gc, baseFont.derive(Font.PLAIN,12,Ui.UNITS_pt), baseFont.derive(Font.PLAIN,8,Ui.UNITS_pt));
    }
}

public class DefaultTextRenderer implements TextRenderer {
    protected Map<FontSize,Font> fontSizeMap = new HashMap<FontSize,Font>();
    protected Graphics gc;
    public DefaultTextRenderer(Graphics gc, Font largeFont, Font smallFont) {
        this.gc = gc;
        fontSizeMap.put(LARGE, largeFont);
        fontSizeMap.put(SMALL, smallFont);        
    }
    public void render(String text, int x, int y, FontSize size) {
        Font font = fontSizeMap.get(size)
        int pixelWidth = font.getAdvance(text);
        gc.setFont(font);

        // TODO: note here I'm not dealing with the vertical offsets you're using
        // which are dependent upon the font size. It would be possible, but
        // I suspect what you really ought to be doing is consistently rendering
        // text on a baseline.
        // The way you could adjust this to closer match what you appear to be doing
        // would be to have arguments to render() which indicate vertical alignment.
        // something like 
        // TextRenderer.VerticalAlignment = enum { BASELINE, TOP, BOTTOM }
        // and based on something like that you could compute here the y offset
        // based on the selected font.
        // I can't do that now because you're "magic numbers" hard coded don't explain
        // what they're trying to do
        gc.drawText(text, Math.round(x - (pixelWidth / 2)), y);
    }
}

// your example
public void paint(Graphics graphics) {
    super.paint(graphics);

    String strScore = String.valueOf(score);
    TextRenderer textRenderer = ScreenDimensionAwareTextRendererFactory.getTextRenderer(graphics);
    int middleX = Math.round(this.backgroundBitmap.getWidth() / 2);
    textRenderer.render(strScore, middleX, 10, TextRenderer.TextSize.LARGE);
    textRenderer.render(judgeName, middleX, this.backgroundBitmap.getHeight(), TextRenderer.TextSize.SMALL);
}
7
  • Thanks but if the graphics reference is set within the calling class should the graphics reference not be passed into the LargeTextRenderer & SmallTextRenderer classes ?
    – user701254
    Jul 20, 2011 at 15:00
  • Indeed, if the use case requires that the GC is provided to the strategy implementation then so be it. Likewise if you need to be able to provide locations on the GC, they get passed in too. Without more context in you initial code sample it's not possible to know this for the answer. I'll update the code
    – ptomli
    Jul 20, 2011 at 15:01
  • The key to remember here is that the Strategy pattern defines a consistent interface, in this case something like "render some text at some x/y position", and implementations define how that happens, specifically here the implementations differ in how they render different sized text. This is illustrated by the fact that the different implementations main differences are focused around the font width/size.
    – ptomli
    Jul 20, 2011 at 15:12
  • I've added another code snippet from a different method, could the same strategy pattern you described be used in this case ?
    – user701254
    Jul 20, 2011 at 15:58
  • Yes, I'll update my answer to match the extended sample you've provided
    – ptomli
    Jul 20, 2011 at 17:05
0

If the conditionals don't vary, you could use the Servant design pattern.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Design_pattern_Servant

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