2

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?

5
  • 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?
    – nablex
    Feb 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.
    – PhilMr
    Feb 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.
    – nablex
    Feb 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.
    – PhilMr
    Feb 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.
    – nablex
    Mar 3, 2014 at 7:01

1 Answer 1

0

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.

0

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