Problem statement:
There are three types of Machines, Machine1 Machine2 and Machine3. There are three types of validators, ValidatorX , ValidatorY , ValidatorZ.
Each Validator validates each machine differently.
Write Java classes to design the above problem.
The program runs from a main function , which already has the list of validators and machines. Each Validator should print a message during validation
"Validator X validating Machine Y";
To design this, First of all I have created one Machine class and 3 different Validator classes.
Machine.java
/**
* Machine
*
* @author sunny
*
*/
public class Machine {
private final String name;
public Machine(final String name) {
this.name = name;
}
public boolean validate(final Validator validator) {
return validator.validate(this);
}
public String getName() {
return name;
}
}
Validator.java
/**
* This is an abstract class for a Validator
*
* @author sunny
*
*/
public abstract class Validator {
private String name;
public Validator(final String name) {
this.name = name;
}
public boolean validate(final Machine machine) {
System.out.println("Validator " + getName() + " validating "
+ machine.getName());
// Here I need to write login corresponding to the machine name
// I need to write if machine Name is X then do this
// if machine name is Y then do this.
// I need to avoid this if else or switch case
// Is there any other better way to achieve this.
return true;
}
public String getName() {
return name;
}
}
ValidatorX.java
/**
* This is one ValidatorX class that I have created
*
* Similarly I have written ValidatorY and ValidatorZ classes
*
* @author sunny
*
*/
public class ValidatorX extends Validator {
public ValidatorX() {
super("X");
}
@Override
public boolean validate(Machine machine) {
super.validate(machine);
return true;
}
}
TestMain.java
import java.util.ArrayList;
import java.util.List;
/**
* Test class I have written to test this.
*
* @author sunny
*
*/
public class TestMain {
public static void main(String[] args) {
Validator[] validators = { new ValidatorX(), new ValidatorY(),
new ValidatorZ() };
List<Machine> machines = new ArrayList<Machine>();
machines.add(new Machine("Machine1"));
machines.add(new Machine("Machine2"));
machines.add(new Machine("Machine3"));
for (int i = 0; i < validators.length; i++) {
for (Machine machine : machines) {
validators[i].validate(machine);
}
}
}
}
In Validator.java (as you can see in the comments) I need to write login corresponding to the machine name, I need to write if machine Name is Machine1 then do this if machine name is Machine2 then do this. I need to avoid this if else or switch case. Is there any other better way to achieve this.
Machine
class isn't correct. "There are three types ofMachine
s:Machine1
,Machine2
, andMachine3
". The word "type" there tells me that each machine is a separate type (i.e. class, in this case). As I said in my first comment, I'm pretty sure the visitor pattern works using types, not fields in the object you pass it.