In a language were both are available, would you prefer to see an instance constructor or a static method that returns an instance? For example, if you're creating a string from a char[]:
String.FromCharacters(chars)new String(chars)
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In a language were both are available, would you prefer to see an instance constructor or a static method that returns an instance? For example, if you're creating a
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In Effective Java, 2nd edition, Joshua Bloch certainly recommends the former. There are a few reasons I can remember, and doubtless some I can't:
The downsides:
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As Jon Skeet paraphrased Josh Bloch, there are a number of reasons why a static factory method is preferable to a constructor in many cases. I would say that if the class is a simple one with no expensive setup or complicated usage, stay with the idiomatic constructor. Modern JVMs make object creation extremely fast and cheap. If the class might be subclassed or you are able to make it immutable (a big advantage for concurrent programming, which is only going to get more important), then go with the factory method. One more tip. Don't name the factory method |
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It depends. For languages in which using an instance constructor is "normal", I would generally use one unless I had good reason not to. This follows the principle of least surprise. By the way, you forgot another common case: A null/default constructor paired with an initialization method. |
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I write a constructor when creating the instance has no side effects, i.e. when the only thing the constructor is doing is initializing properties. I write a static method (and make the constructor private) if creating the instance does something that you wouldn't ordinarily expect a constructor to do. For example:
Because I adhere to this convention, if I see
while reading my code, I have a very different set of expectations about what each of those two lines is doing. That code isn't telling me what it is that makes creating a Foo different from creating a Bar, but it's telling me that I need to look. |
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If your object is immutable, you may be able to use the static method to return cached objects and save yourself the memory allocation and processing. |
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There's a paper from ICSE'07 that studied the usability of constructors vs. factory patterns. While I prefer factory patterns, the study showed that developers were slower in finding the correct factory method. http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~NatProg/papers/Ellis2007FactoryUsability.pdf |
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I personally prefer to see a normal constructor, since contructors should be used to construct. However, if there is a good reason to not use one, ie if FromCharacters explicitly stated that it didn't allocate new memory, it would be worthwhile. The "new" in the invocation has meaning. |
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I prefer instance constructor, just because that makes more sense to me, and there's less potential ambiguity with what you're trying to express (ie: what if FromCharacters is a method which takes a single character). Certainly subjective, though. |
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Static Method. Then you can return a null, rather than throwing an exception (unless a reference type) |
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