The question is basically for Static Utility Classes, which exist in a package to provide certain functionality to other classes. I'll take a common example stripParenthesis()
Method 1. Explicit Null Check
public static String stripParenthesis(String str) {
if(str == null) {
return str;
}
return str.replaceAll("[()]",""); // remove paarenthesis
}
Method 2. Using Lombok's @NonNull
/* @NonNull will throw NPE */
public static String stripParenthesis(@NonNull String str) {
return str.replaceAll("[()]",""); // remove paarenthesis
}
Method 3. Explicit NPE
public static String stripParenthesis(String str) throws NullPointerException {
if(str == null) {
throw NPE();
}
return str.replaceAll("[()]",""); // remove paarenthesis
}
All the 3 methods are correct. I do not prefer 2nd approach since it throws a NPE as unchecked exception. The caller can unexpectedly fail.
Is there a general convention to follow here?
Optional
.String
handling utilities is that they handlenull
s silently; if you pass in anull
value, they returnnull
. For inspiration, have a look at the widely-used StringUtils class from Apache commons.lang. Here's a quote from the docs: "A side effect of thenull
handling is that aNullPointerException
should be considered a bug inStringUtils
". As suggested by Tom, returning anOptional<String>
might be one option.