In Java, I have a bunch of fields and associated getter/setter methods. Do you prefer to group them per field or fields first then getter/setters?
Style 1:
int A
int getA()
int B
int getB()
Style 2:
int A
int B
int getA()
int getB()
In Java, I have a bunch of fields and associated getter/setter methods. Do you prefer to group them per field or fields first then getter/setters?
Style 1:
int A
int getA()
int B
int getB()
Style 2:
int A
int B
int getA()
int getB()
This may not really answer your question, as I will not talk about style, but for trivial getters and setter I do not write any code anymore. Have a look at Projekt Lombok, were all you’d have to write would be:
@Getter @Setter int a;
@Getter @Setter int b;
And if this still looks like too much code, the annotations can also be at class level.
Maybe you should have a look on Java Code Conventions:
Put declarations only at the beginning of blocks. (A block is any code surrounded by curly braces "{" and "}".) Don't wait to declare variables until their first use; it can confuse the unwary programmer and hamper code portability within the scope.
This applies to methods, if/else blocks, loops, and, of course, classes.
So, the convention encourages for the second approach.
Personnally, style 2. Mostly depends on the coding standard of your team.
I prefer to have all the member variables on top, starting from public to private. Then all the methods again ordered by visibility.
I would prefer to group them fields first followed by methods, but it really doesn't matter. All it matters is that whatever convention you choose is followed uniformly throughout the project.
I think you better declare the Variables before and the the Get/Set methods in a separated methode section, specially as some programmign languages doesnt allow you to declare procedures between the variables so if you move to program in one of these you will not have to get used to it. Besides separating functions from Variables makes it easier to search for a function when you need it.