3

first of all I'm using java, even though it could be a question for any language

say I have a complicated system, now sometimes I end up building objects (setting all the parameters), then passing it over to a "target layer"(manager), which opens the object (getting the parameters).

if I were to pass all the parameters in one function, it would be considered poor design, because there's suppose to be a small amount of parameters per function

this seems like a waste, and in the past I also decided to set the parameters straight to the "target layer"

is there a design pattern that deals with this issue? or something that books or experts in the subject recommend?

1
  • have you tried for static variables and functions?
    – AJ.
    Oct 9, 2013 at 9:24

4 Answers 4

3

You might take a look on the Effective Java Book that will cover Design method signatures carefully

There will be three techniques for shortening long parameters :

  • break the method into multiple methods, each which require only a subset of the parameters
  • create helper classes to hold group of parameters (typically static member classes)
  • adapt the Builder pattern from object construction to method invocation

Since you're asking the reference, I hope it can help solve your problem and don't forget to buy the book here

2
  • thank you, your answer was the most comprehensive, I think I'll buy that book
    – Amir.F
    Oct 9, 2013 at 11:12
  • You are most welcome and glad that I can help. Keep working on
    – user1088172
    Oct 10, 2013 at 4:35
1

Since you were asking about book references, here is one from Clean Code, Chapter 3: Functions:

When a function seems to need more than two or three arguments, it is likely that some of those arguments ought to be wrapped into a class of their own. [...]

Reducing the number of arguments by creating objects out of them may seem like cheating, but it’s not. When groups of variables are passed together, [...] they are likely part of a concept that deserves a name of its own.

So I guess it's ok to group a lot of method arguments into classes, as long as these classes represent some coherent concepts.

Personally if I do something like this, I like the wrapper class to be immutable and created by a dedicated builder. Which increases the number of additional classes twofold (wrapper and the builder), but enables the treatment of such a class as one atomic argument.

2
  • 1
    thank you, I one upped you, but there was a more comprehensive answer, I agree with your claim, and I do have a coherent concept, the builder pattern is I think my issue here
    – Amir.F
    Oct 9, 2013 at 11:14
  • 1
    No problem, I also liked the answer you chose (in fact, I upvoted it before writing my own).
    – siledh
    Oct 9, 2013 at 11:41
1

Extract the parameters into its own "Parameter-Object" (pattern name) and pass that object to the function. If the Parameter-Object itself is complicated to construct, use the Builder-Pattern which simplifies the construction if the object can be constructed in different ways.

For Example:

function(param1, param2, param3, ...)

The parameters are then extracted into an Object:

class ParamObject {
  param1;
  param2;
  param3;
}

with its corresponding setters and getters.

To construct the ParamObject use the BuilderPattern.

And finally, the invocation would look like this:

function(paramobject):

Inside the function the former arguments are then retreived from the object. As siledh stated: Make sure to group arguments into classes that share a common concept, which means that it´s ok to create several classes out of the paramlist.

0
0

This sounds like a Data Transfer Object to me.

http://martinfowler.com/eaaCatalog/dataTransferObject.html

1
  • a DTO carries data between different processes, and I'm talking about the same package, thank you also for your answer though
    – Amir.F
    Oct 9, 2013 at 11:17

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.