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Let's say the following XML is given:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<ResC>
    <Err text="Error text 1"/>
    <ConRes>
        <Err text="Error text 2"/>
        <ConList>
            <Err text="Error text 3"/>
            <Con>
                <Err text="Error text 4"/>
            </Con>
        </ConList>
    </ConRes>
</ResC>

As you can see the <Err> element may appear on every level of the XML.

Using Simple I would like to deserialize this XML. So, I have created the following class:

@Element(required=false)
public class Err {
    @Attribute
    private String text;

    public void setText(String text) { this.text = text; }

    public String getText() { return text; }
}

However, how do I have to annotate the classes for <ResC>, <ConRes>, <ConList> and <Con>? Do I really have to declare an attribute of type <Err> in every single class in which it may appear? This seems like a lot of overhead. If so, then I would have to check every single object if it contains an error.

Is there any better and easier way? :-)

Thanks,
Robert

share|improve this question
Excellent question btw. – Robert Massaioli Jun 12 '11 at 13:19

1 Answer

up vote 0 down vote accepted

The important thing to remember is that Simple XML should be able to follow any structure that you can logically generate using classes. So you could just create a BaseClass that uses an error interface and applies the Decorator pattern so that it passes all of that through to a concrete error class without any of the implementing objects needing to know what they have been given.

That probably made no sense. How about I just show you...okay...I just went away and implemented exactly what I was thinking and here are the results (full code link):

The Main File:

package com.massaiolir.simple.iface;

import java.io.File;

import org.simpleframework.xml.Serializer;
import org.simpleframework.xml.core.Persister;

public class Main {
    public static void main(String[] args) throws Exception {
        Serializer serial = new Persister();
        ResC resc = serial.read(ResC.class, new File("data/testdata.xml"));

        System.out.println(" == Printing out all of the error text. == ");
        System.out.println(resc.getErrorText());
        System.out.println(resc.conRes.getErrorText());
        System.out.println(resc.conRes.conList.getErrorText());
        for (Con con : resc.conRes.conList.cons) {
            System.out.println(con.getErrorText());
        }
        System.out.println(" == Finished printing out all of the error text. == ");
    }
}

It just runs simple and displays the results.

The BaseObject.java class:

package com.massaiolir.simple.iface;

import org.simpleframework.xml.Element;

public class BaseObject implements Error {
    @Element(name = "Err", required = false, type = ConcreteError.class)
    private Error err;

    @Override
    public String getErrorText() {
        return err.getErrorText();
    }

    @Override
    public void setErrorText(String errorText) {
        err.setErrorText(errorText);
    }
}

This is the class that everything should extend if it wants 'Err'.

The Error interface:

package com.massaiolir.simple.iface;

public interface Error {
    void setErrorText(String errorText);

    String getErrorText();
}

The ConcreteError class:

package com.massaiolir.simple.iface;

import org.simpleframework.xml.Attribute;

public class ConcreteError implements Error {
    @Attribute
    private String text;

    @Override
    public String getErrorText() {
        return text;
    }

    @Override
    public void setErrorText(String errorText) {
        this.text = errorText;
    }

}

The actual implementing classes are after this point. You will see that they are rather trivial because the real work is being handled in the classes above.

The Con class:

package com.massaiolir.simple.iface;

public class Con extends BaseObject {

}

The ConList class:

package com.massaiolir.simple.iface;

import java.util.ArrayList;

import org.simpleframework.xml.ElementList;

public class ConList extends BaseObject {
    @ElementList(entry = "Con", inline = true)
    public ArrayList<Con> cons;
}

The ConRes class:

package com.massaiolir.simple.iface;

import org.simpleframework.xml.Element;

public class ConRes extends BaseObject {
    @Element(name = "ConList")
    public ConList conList;
}

The ResC class:

package com.massaiolir.simple.iface;

import org.simpleframework.xml.Element;
import org.simpleframework.xml.Root;

@Root
public class ResC extends BaseObject {
    @Element(name = "ConRes")
    public ConRes conRes;
}

And that is all that there is to it. Pretty simple right. I was able to bang that all out in ten minutes. It actually took me longer to write this response than it took me to write the code that I am giving you. If you do not understand anything about the code that I have just written then please let me know. I hope this helps you to understand how you might go about doing something like this.

share|improve this answer
Thanks a lot for this code example. That's exactly what I've been looking for :-) – Robert Jun 15 '11 at 6:44
@Robert Strauch: No problems, hopefully it helps other people too. – Robert Massaioli Jun 15 '11 at 9:31

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