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I'm new to a team working on a rather large project, with lots of components and dependencies. For every component, there's an interfaces package where the exposed interfaces for that component are placed. Is this a good practice?

My usual practice has always been interfaces and implementations go in the same package.

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  • 5
    Why is this tagged [language-agnostic]?
    – finnw
    May 22, 2011 at 9:45
  • Another situation where this might be preferred if the module is to be communicated over some rpc rather than direct invocation - then interface comes in handy to generate proxies for the client ??
    – redzedi
    Oct 13, 2020 at 5:28

14 Answers 14

118

Placing both the interface and the implementation is common place, and doesn't seem to be a problem.

Take for example the Java API -- most classes have both interfaces and their implementations included in the same package.

Take for example the java.util package:

It contains the interfaces such as Set, Map, List, while also having the implementations such as HashSet, HashMap and ArrayList.

Furthermore, the Javadocs are designed to work well in those conditions, as it separates the documentation into the Interfaces and Classes views when displaying the contents of the package.

Having packages only for interfaces may actually be a little bit excessive, unless there are enormous numbers of interfaces. But separating the interfaces into their own packages just for the sake of doing so sounds like bad practice.

If differentiating the name of a interface from an implementation is necessary, one could have a naming convention to make interfaces easier to identify:

  • Prefix the interface name with an I. This approach is taken with the interfaces in the .NET framework. It would be fairly easy to tell that IList is an interface for a list.

  • Use the -able suffix. This approach is seen often in the Java API, such as Comparable, Iterable, and Serializable to name a few.

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  • 47
    +1 although I wouldn't recommend the I* naming convention unless you're in the .NETverse, and even then only for consistency
    – CurtainDog
    Jun 17, 2009 at 5:31
  • 8
    I've used this convention in java code and I've found it useful .... YMMV
    – hhafez
    Jun 17, 2009 at 6:14
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    I know this is kind of old, but what I have found to be suggested now is to name the interface clearly, and name the implementation something strager. e.g. Interface = Store Implementation = StoreImpl Mainly to highlight that the interface should be used over the implementation. May 6, 2015 at 15:47
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    I this that this approach, even if it looks right, brings to architectural problems. For example, there's no way to define libraries that use just the interfaces and then have them implemented in a common library, that is the infrastructure layer. May 18, 2018 at 9:48
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    I agree with the comment about not using the "I" prefix for interfaces in the same way I wouldn't recommend using the "impl" suffix for implementations, this is a nice article reflecting on those cases: octoperf.com/blog/2016/10/27/impl-classes-are-evil
    – raspacorp
    Apr 16, 2019 at 22:23
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For any language, putting them together in the same package is fine. The important thing is what's exposed to the outside world, and how it looks from outside. Nobody's going to know or care if the implementation is in that same package or not.

Let's look at this particular instance.

If you have all public things in one package, and private things in another package that is not publicly exposed, the client of the library sees one package. If you move the private things to the package with the publicly exposed things, but do not expose them from within the package, the client sees exactly the same thing.

Thus, this has the smell of a rule with no good reason: it's making a decision based on something being publicly visible without that decision having any effect on what's publicly visible.

That said, if in any particular instance it seems like a good idea to split the interface and implementation in to separate packages, go right ahead and do that. Reasons for doing this that come to mind are that the package is huge, or you have an alternate implementation you might want to link in instead of the standard one.

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  • Given the 'Java' tag on the question - what is the meaning of a 'publicly exposed package', in Java? Or is your answer not Java-specific? I thought only package members (such as classes, interfaces and their members), not packages themselves, had access control specifiers like 'public', 'private' etc. (This is discussed further @ question stackoverflow.com/questions/4388715/…)
    – bacar
    Mar 7, 2012 at 22:12
  • I just clarified the wording; by "publicly exposed package" I really meant, "the package with the publicly exposed things."
    – cjs
    Jul 6, 2012 at 6:39
  • Surely all the packages should have public things; if not, how can you use the package?
    – bacar
    Jul 6, 2012 at 7:59
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    In this particular case, there were packages with nothing public, but which were used by packages that made things public. So the former cannot be used directly, but only indirectly through the latter.
    – cjs
    Dec 7, 2014 at 7:40
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    But the same question applies. How can the packages that made things public use the packages that did not make anything public? I know of no way in Java to enforce "the former cannot be used directly, but only indirectly through the latter." If your implementation package has only private members, it is just as inaccessible by your interface package as it is by the client. & similarly for other access scopes. There's no equivalent of friend (C++) or internal (C#) in Java.
    – bacar
    Dec 9, 2014 at 9:25
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In many frameworks, such as OSGi, you almost have to. I think this promotes looser coupling, at the package instead of the jar level.

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The book Practical Software Engineering: A Case-Study Approach advocates for putting interfaces in seperate projects/packages.

The PCMEF+ architecture which the book talks about has the following principles:

  1. Downward Dependency Principle (DDP)
  2. Upward Notification Principle (UNP)
  3. Neighbor Communication Principle (NCP)
  4. Explicit Association Principle (EAP)
  5. Cycle Elimination Principle (CEP)
  6. Class Naming Principle (CNP)
  7. Acquaintance Package Principle (APP)

The description of principle #3 and #7 explain why it is a good idea:

The Neighbor Communication Principle demands that a package can only communicate directly with its neighbor package. This principle ensures that the system does not disintegrate to an incompressible network of intercommunicating objects. To enforce this principle, message passing between non-neighboring objects uses delegation (Section 9.1.5.1). In more complex scenarios, acquaintance package (Section 9.1.8.2) can be used to group interfaces to assist in collaboration that engages distant packages.

The Acquaintance Package Principle is the consequence of the Neighbor Communication Principle. The acquaintance package consists of interfaces that an object passes, instead of concrete objects, in arguments to method calls. The interfaces can be implemented in any PCMEF package. This effectively allows communication between non-neighboring packages while centralizing dependency management to a single acquaintance package. The need for acquaintance package was explained in Section 9.1.8.2 and is discussed again next in PCMEF context.

See this link: http://comp.mq.edu.au/books/pse/about_book/Ch9.pdf

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One argument for putting interfaces in different packages is that it is easier to create 'api' jars that can be distributed to consumers of your product or service. It's perfectly possible to do this with interfaces and implementations together, but simpler to script if they are in different packages.

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    You can have the API project separate (being a separate distributable) and that still does not stop interfaces and implementation being in the same package. A bit like you have unit tests in the same package as tested classes but still in a separate build artifact. Jars and packages are pretty much orthogonal in Java.
    – George
    Jun 17, 2009 at 9:49
  • what do you mean? How can I create a jar that only contains the interfaces when thr package contains also the implementations?
    – cobby
    Nov 16, 2022 at 10:45
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Yes, it's a very good practice, because it allows you to publish the interface without publishing your specific implementation. That said, if you have no need to publish external interfaces, there's no problem with putting the interface definitions in the same package as the implementation.

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    Maybe if you are defining interfaces for the JCP or something this makes good sense, but if you are producing multiple concrete implementations of these interfaces for your project then it seems like an unnecessary burden to package the interfaces separately. Jun 17, 2009 at 3:47
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    It's not much of a burden, in any event... Jun 17, 2009 at 3:50
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    -1 Yes, it is. It makes it unnecessarily hard to find the implementations and separates things that belong together. Jun 17, 2009 at 5:58
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    And not publishing the implementations is a completely different matter that can be done by making them package-private - and can NOT be done by placing them in a separate package. There is no such thing as a non-public package. Jun 17, 2009 at 6:01
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    Moreover, it sounds like making all the interfaces unnecessarily public. Jun 17, 2009 at 14:05
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We do this where I work (ie: put interface in one package and implementation in another) and the main advantage we get out of this is we can easily swap between implementations.

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    How does it help you switch the implemenations?
    – Janusz
    Jun 17, 2009 at 3:57
  • see the answer by Cameron Pope, it is exactly the reason we are doing it here
    – hhafez
    Jun 17, 2009 at 5:24
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I haven't much Java experience, but I like to do this as a good practice in C#/.NET because it allows for future expansion where the assemblies with the concrete classes which implement the interfaces may not be distributed all the way down to the client because they are proxied by a middleman factory or across the wire in a web service scenario.

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I normally put Interfaces with the implementation however I can sort of see why you may want to keep them separate. Say, for instance, someone wanted to reimplement classes based upon your interfaces, they would need a jar/lib/etc with your implementation rather than just the interfaces. With them separate you could just say "Here's my implementation of that interface" and be done with it. Like I said, not what I do but I can sort of see why some might want to.

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I'm doing this on a project and it is working well for me because of these reasons:

  • Separately packaged interfaces and implementations are for a different use case than for the various types of Map or Set. There is no reason to have a package just for trees (java.util.tree.Map, java.util.tree.Set). It is just a standard datastructure, so put it together with the other datastructures. However, if you are dealing with a puzzle game that has a really simple debug interface and a pretty production interface, as part of its front-end you might have a com.your.app.skin.debug and a com.your.app.skin.pretty. I would not put these in the same package, because they do different things and I know I would resort to some SmurfNamingConvention (DebugAttackSurface, DebugDefenceSurface, PrettyAttackSurface etc) to create some informal namespace for the two if they were in the same package.

  • My workaround for the problem of finding related interfaces and implementations that are in separate packages is to adopt a naming configuration for my packages. E.g. I can have all my interfaces in com.your.app.skin.framework, and know that other packages on the same level of the package tree are implementations. The disadvantage is that this is an unconventional convention. Honestly, I will see how good this convention is in 6 months time :)

  • I do not use this technique religiously. There are interfaces which only make sense in a particular implementation. I don't stick them in the framework package. There are some packages where it doesn't look like I'm going to create 40 different implementation classes, so I don't bother.

  • My application uses guice and has very many interfaces.

Questions of program design generally involve benefits and drawbacks and there is no one-size-fits all answer. Like why would you ever use this technique in a tiny 200-line program? It makes sense for me, given my other architectural choices, for my specific problem. :)

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I prefer them in the same package. Feels pointless to create a package specifically for interfaces. This is especially redundant for teams that simply love their interface prefixes and suffixes (e.g. the "I", and "Impl" for Java).

If there's a needs to publish a set of interfaces as public API, it makes more sense to keep them in an entirely separate project and create project dependencies instead. But it all boils down to preference and convenience of the situation I suppose.

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I think it is important to note that for the OSGi framework, it is nicer that they are in different packages so that you can easily export a whole package while hiding the implementation packages.

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Put them in packages that reflect your projects. It is fine and common to put interfaces and implementations together if they're part of the same project, but if you're writing an API, then someone else would likely be choosing a package name relevant to their project.

In general, if it's for the same project, I don't see any benefit in keeping the interfaces in a separate package from their impls. If it's getting cluttered, there may be other package naming issues, irrespective of the interface arrangement.

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There are a lot of good reasons for putting interfaces in a separate package from implementation. For example you may want to use container that supports Dependency Injection to wire up the necessary implementation(s) at run time, in which case only the interface needs to be present at build time and the implementation can be supplied at run time. Alternatively, you may want to provide multiple implementations (for example using mock implementations for testing) or multiple versions of a particular implementation at run time (for example for A/B testing, etc). For these kinds of use cases it's more convenient to package interface and implementation separately.

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  • You don't need to put the implementation in a different package to do either of the things you listed
    – Crowie
    Jul 8, 2013 at 15:05
  • That's fair, but I still think that the "being present at build time vs run time" difference in requirements is a compelling case for packaging separately. I updated the text to try to reflect that more clearly.
    – Tyson
    Jul 8, 2013 at 21:08

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