I am developing a MVC rich GUI application in Java and I have to use an external scientific library which already defines most of the classes that I will potentially use in my domain model. What are the best practices in this case? may I need to wrap all the classes defined in the library with interfaces?
-
You mean the external library defines beans that you want to reuse in your application? Or GUI elements or...? What technology are you using for the GUI?– nablexFeb 27, 2014 at 13:23
-
For GUI I am using JavaFX. and yes, I mean the external library defines beans that I want to reuse in my application.– PhilMrFeb 28, 2014 at 13:34
-
I don't really see the problem then, just use the beans and cleanly separate the logic that binds the beans to the GUI elements.– nablexFeb 28, 2014 at 13:48
-
From my perspective the problem is: this library mainly is an XML parser of a XML-based scientific standard. If the standard (and consequently the library) changes in near future I have my application stuck to the old standard. So I was thinking to wrap all of the classes with adequate interfaces, but still I don't know, generally speaking, if this is the most common approach to solve dependency on third party libraries.– PhilMrFeb 28, 2014 at 15:31
-
If they update the standard, will your interfaces not be deprecated as well? Either the new features or removed features in the standard will have to be reflected in your interfaces I would assume.– nablexMar 3, 2014 at 7:01
Add a comment
|
1 Answer
Personally I would wrap 3rd party classes into implementation of my interface if:
- the 3rd party library is still evolving (new changes are expected)
- the 3rd party library is not solving all my issues
- I don't want to stick with only one provider (of the scientific library)
- my application is long term project
Otherwise I would us the 3rd party classes directly. Introducing unnecessary layers of abstraction at the beginning of the project is very often waste of time.