2

I have an array of strings containing names of classes. Is it possible to invoke the static methods of the actual class using the 'name of the class' in the string array.

public class SortCompare {

    // There are classes called 'Insertion', 'Selection' and 'Shell' which have a 
    //   method called 'sort'
    private static String[] algorithm = {  "Insertion", "Selection", "Shell"};

    public static double timeTheRun(String alg, Comparable[] a) {

        for (int i = 0; i < algorithm.length; i++)
            if (alg.equalsIgnoreCase(algorithm[i])) {
                Stopwatch timer = new Stopwatch();

                 // I want to invoke one of Insertion.sort(), Selection.sort()
                 // or Shell.sort() depending on the value of 'alg' here

                 break;
            }
                return timer.elapsedTime();
        }

I could forget about the array of strings and simple use a if-else block to invoke them.

         if (alg.equals("Insertion"))
            Insertion.sort(a);
         else if (alg.equals("Selection"))
            Selection.sort(a);
         else if (alg.equals("Shell"))
            Shell.sort(a);

But I will keep implementing other sorts and variations of them in future and every time I will have to make changes in multiple places(The above if-else loop, the help message of my program). If the former approach is possible then I'll just have to insert an extra string to the array every time.

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3 Answers 3

6

The better way to implement this would be to create a common interface for your sorting algorithms:

interface SortingAlgorithm {
    public void sort(Comparable[] a);
};

Then have all your algorithms implement that interface:

class InsertionSort implements SortingAlgorithm {
    public void sort(Comparable[] a) {
        // sort here using insertion-sort
    }
};

and make the parameter to your method take an implementation of the interface:

public static double timeTheRun(SortingAlgorithm alg, Comparable[] a) {
    // all the setup
    alg.sort(a);
    // all the post-processing
}

You would then call that method like this:

timeTheRun(new InsertionSort(), data);

This has the disadvantage that you cannot make the sorting-routine a static method, though.

Alternative If you insist on static methods, make your routine take a class-object as parameter:

public static double timeTheRun(Class algClass, Comparable[] a) {
    // all the setup
    algClass.getMethod("sort", Comparable[].class).invoke(null, a);
    // all the post-processing
}    

Note that you will either have to add a try-catch-block or a throws declaration for the various exceptions that the reflection methods can throw. Then you can call it like this:

timeTheRun(InsertSort.class, data);
4
  • 1
    I'd disagree with the perceived disadvantage at the end - conceptually there's still a sort of static method access, in that you call the constructor (a special type of static method) and then follow it by .sort(x). For any situation where static-ness was a real requirement, this still provides the sort of static accessibility - e.g. you don't have to have an instance of SortingAlgorithm pre-wired. But it also means you can do if you wish (which is the underlying desire of the question, whether the asker realised it or not). Jun 28, 2011 at 8:07
  • @Andrzej: I added another proposal that uses reflection and a static method, but is more elegant than the OPs approach (IMHO). Jun 28, 2011 at 8:14
  • 1
    That is a good alternative if it strictly needs to be a static method for some reason (e.g. limited wiring from an IoC container etc.). It's a shame that static methods can't be referred to in interfaces though, since what you really want for the first parameter is a Class<? extends SortingAlgorithm>, so that you get compile-time safety rather than NoSuchMethodException at runtime. Le sigh. Jun 28, 2011 at 8:23
  • @Andrzej: I only now understood your first comment. I completely agree! Jun 28, 2011 at 11:32
4

Yes, this is possible via reflection.

Method method = Class.forName(alg).getMethod("sort", Comparable[].class);
method.invoke(null, a);

However, using reflection is not a very clean approach. You should consider changing your code to have your sorting algorithms implementing an interface containing this sort method. That way you could directly invoke the sort method in a clean way.

2
  • The second parameter to getMethod should be Comparable[].class. Jun 28, 2011 at 8:22
  • @Space_C0wb0y Indeed, missed that. Edited the answer.
    – wjans
    Jun 28, 2011 at 8:26
0

Yes, what you need is the factory pattern.

Make a common interface shared between the sort algorithms. Then make a factory object that returns the right algorithm based on the input. You can input a enum, string, .class, whatever you like.

public interface Sort {
    void sort(Comparable[] a)
}

public class SortFactory {
    public static sort getSorter(SortType type) {
        if (type == SortType.INSERTION)
            return new InsertionSort();
        if (type == SortType.SELECTION)
            return new SelectionSort();
        if (type == SortType.SHELL)
            return new ShellSort();
    }
}


public enum SortType {
    INSERTION,
    SELECTION,
    SHELL
}

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