1

Introduction:

I've built a class hierarchy for database filters:

class Filter {
}

class PropertyFilter<T> extends Filter {
  Boolean exists;
  T equal;
}

class ComparableFilter<T> extends PropertyFilter<T> {
  T greaterThan;
  T lessThan;
}

This way I can use PropertyFilter<String> for Strings and ComparableFilter<DateTime> for DateTime objects.


The tricky part:

I have some filter query builder that follows the same hierarchy as the filter classes. Each party of the query builder should add only the additional queries.

Example:

class FilterQueryBuilder<T extends Filter> {
  protected final T filter;      

  public FilterQueryBuilder(T filter) {
    this.filter = filter;
  }

  public Query getQuery() {
    return new Query();
  }
}

class PropertyFilterQueryBuilder<T extends PropertyFilter<?>> extends FilterQueryBuilder<T> {
  public PropertyFilterQueryBuilder(T filter) {
    super(filter);
  }

  public Query getQuery() {
    Query query = super.getQuery();
    if(filter.exists != null) addExistsQuery(query, filter.exists);
    if(filter.equal != null) addEqualQuery(query, filter.equal);
    return query;
  }
}

class ComparableFilterQueryBuilder<T extends ComparableFilter<?>> extends PropertyFilterQueryBuilder<T> {
  public ComparableFilterQueryBuilder(T filter) {
    super(filter);
  }

  public Query getQuery() {
    Query query = super.getQuery();
    if(filter.greaterThan != null) addGreaterThanQuery(query, filter.greaterThan);
    if(filter.lessThan != null) addLessThanQuery(query, filter.lessThan);
    return query;
  }
}

Problem / Questions:

As you can see, I always have to call super.getQuery() and then return the modified query object.

It would be much easier if each class only has a addFiltersToQuery method like this:

addFiltersToQuery() {
  if(filter.x != null) addXQuery(query, filter.x);
  if(filter.y != null) addYQuery(query, filter.y);
}

But of course I'd override this method with my class hierarchy. Though if I call addFiltersToQuery inside the FilterQueryBuilder class, I would only get the latest implementation.

Is there any way to call all implementation without using super?

1 Answer 1

0

I now built some way to work around this:

class FilterQueryBuilder<T extends Filter> {
  private final T filter;
  private List<Consumer<Query>> queryConsumers = new ArrayList<>();

  public FilterQueryBuilder(T filter) {
    this.filter = filter;
  }

  protected void addQueryConsumer(Consumer<Query> consumer) {
     queryConsumers.add(consumer);
  }

  public Query getQuery() {
    Query query = new Query();
    queryConsumers.forEach(c -> c.accept(query));
    return query;
  }
}

class PropertyFilterQueryBuilder<T extends PropertyFilter<?>> extends FilterQueryBuilder<T> {
  public PropertyFilterQueryBuilder(T filter) {
    super(filter);
    addQueryConsumer(query -> {
      if(filter.exists != null) addExistsQuery(query, filter.exists);
      if(filter.equal != null) addEqualQuery(query, filter.equal);
    });
  }
}

class ComparableFilterQueryBuilder<T extends ComparableFilter<?>> extends PropertyFilterQueryBuilder<T> {
  public ComparableFilterQueryBuilder(T filter) {
    super(filter);
    addQueryConsumer(query -> {
      if(filter.greaterThan != null) addGreaterThanQuery(query, filter.greaterThan);
      if(filter.lessThan != null) addLessThanQuery(query, filter.lessThan);
    });
  }
}

Each class writes its query additions into the queryConsumers array, and the FilterQueryBuilder class applies all those consumers.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

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