I sometimes write classes which can be converted to- and from- something else, and I'm used to writing it as a non-static convert-to method and a static convert-from method, for example:
class A {
B toB() {...}
static A fromB(B b) {...}
}
or
class B {
void save(File f) {...}
static B load(File f) {...}
}
I used to think it's a good and simple approach, but lately the static-ness of the conversion-from method has been annoying me, for instance if I want to define an interface for types that can be converted to- and from- B:
interface ConvertableToAndFromB {
B toB();
// ?
}
So, is there an elegant way of doing that without having the conversion-from as static, other than migrating to Smalltalk?
EDIT
To clarify, I realize I can add a non-static method in the interface, e.g.:
interface ConvertableToAndFromB {
B toB();
void fromB(B b);
}
or, if I want to allow immutable types (thanks Stripling):
interface ConvertableToAndFromB<T implements ConvertibleToAndFromB<T>> {
B toB();
T fromB(B b);
}
But that will require me to create a new A before I can even invoke this, as in:
A a = new A();
a.fromB(b);
or (for immutable):
A a = new A();
a = a.fromB(b);
which is what I'm trying to avoid (but will do with no other solution). I just hope there's a nicer way.
fromB(..)orload(...)type of methods in a separateFactoryclass, which again can implement its own interface. – anubhava Jan 10 '12 at 18:54frommethods? – Garrett Hall Jan 10 '12 at 18:56newand then callingfromon it? I don't consider this very elegant, especially when dealing with immutable classes, but I agree it is a valid solution. – Oak Jan 10 '12 at 19:01ClassA a = new ClassA(b);is just fine. – gpeche Jan 10 '12 at 19:39