3

i don't want to pass a null value to the view tier, so if i do something like:

  public List<Object> getListObjFoo(){
    List<Object> listObj = datasource.getAll();
    return listObj != null ? listObj : new ArrayList<Object>();
  }

it should be considered a good or a bad practice? and the use of "Optional" in "Guava" from google is better than doing this? why?

10
  • 3
    List<Object> is generally a bad practice. Now a specific List<T> type is okay I guess. Finally, depending on context, this seems fine to me. Sep 23, 2014 at 13:26
  • 3
    @TheLostMind: A null check is always better than an object that you don't need. I strongly disagree with this statement. There is definitely a place for both variants.
    – Keppil
    Sep 23, 2014 at 13:29
  • 4
    You should probably return Collections.emptyList() instead of new ArrayList<>()
    – assylias
    Sep 23, 2014 at 13:30
  • 1
    Two questions: could dataSource.getAll() itself return an empty ArrayList, and if so, is it important to distinguish between that and null?
    – chepner
    Sep 23, 2014 at 13:33
  • 1
    @TheLostMind: What if all the calling method does is a for Object o: list? Then there is no need for an explicit isEmpty() check if this method never returns null.
    – Keppil
    Sep 23, 2014 at 13:34

3 Answers 3

5

Your code is bad practice because it allocates a new instance. Try to use Collection.emptyList() instead.

Drawback: If the consumer of your code wants to change the list, they need to make a copy of the list. But that is good practice since many frameworks return immutable lists and as a consumer, you can never be sure unless the API actually says what you are allowed to do with the result.

Returning null is bad because that exports an implementation detail of your code to the consumer. Or to put it another way around: If you change your implementation and you suddenly find you want to return null, you probably need to add checks in all the places where the API is used. So it hampers your ability to evolve your code and your API.

For other (non-collection) types, you should look at the "optional" pattern as described here: https://stackoverflow.com/a/16218718/34088

This pattern allows you to tell consumers of your API that some method might return "nothing" without ever returning null. That way, consumers know what to expect.

1
  • This answer allows us to think in terms of writing code which can be exposed as API without any bugs.
    – n00bc0d3r
    Sep 24, 2014 at 18:51
5

Not checking for null makes your code much cleaner, but it has its cost (it depends on the complexity of object you want to create).

Returning Collection.emptyList() instead of null is a good practise as its cost is equal to zero.

update

Existing example of returning empty list can be even seen at Java Persistence API in method Query#getResultList(). It always returns empty list of results if no query results have been found.

4

Null is a legacy from the languages with direct memory management, where pointer could point into nowhere. Modern languages and practices encourage to avoid using nulls. As a rule of thumb, try to use non-nullable variables where possible and consider using Optional instead of using nullables. You can read more about reasons here.

Now regarding your case. I assume the question was "what I should return, an empty collection, null or empty Optional?". The short answer is: it depends on your use case. Using nullable result or Optional clearly tells, that the whole result is optional. For example, for web view it can tell that you may or may not render the whole block with list. On the other hand, returning non-nullable collection that may be empty means that you should always render the corresponding block, but in some cases it can have no elements in it.

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