I have been challenged by a design issue which I will try to describe below.
Suppose that a class, call it A, has a constructor with a bunch of parameters. Since it is tiring and dirty to write all those parameters in each instantiation, I have written another class, call it StyleSheetA, which encapsulates all those parameters and is the only parameter to the constructor of A. In this way, I can prepare some default StyleSheetA templates to be used later, and if it is needed, I can modify them.
And at this point, I need to extend A. Suppose B extends A. B will have its own stylesheet, namely StyleSheetB. I think it will be appropriate that StyleSheetB extends StyleSheetA, so with one stylesheet parameter, constructor of B can also construct its super class A. But I am afraid of the possibility that this design may have flaws. For example what if I decide to add a getter/setter for the stylesheet? Is there a novel way to handle all these situations? Am I in the wrong way? For those who are confused, I attach some code here:
class A
{
StyleSheetA ss;
A(StyleSheetA ss)
{
this.ss = ss;
// Do some stuff with ingredients of styleSheet
}
}
class StyleSheetA
{
int n1;
int n2;
// :
// :
int n100;
}
class B extends A
{
B(StyleSheetB ss)
{
super(ss);
// Do some stuff with ingredients of styleSheet
}
}
class StyleSheetB extends StyleSheetA
{
int n101;
int n102;
// :
// :
int n200;
}
Thank you for any help or suggestions, also any of your critics will be appreciated.
Edit: I am developing in java me so there is no generics support.