3

I have a line of code looking like this:

String someString = "something"; if (Foo.SOME_CONSTANT_STRING.equals(someString))

which results in a violation: "Potential violation of Law of Demeter (static property access)"

What is the suggested approach here?

(Edit: I changed the code example)

2
  • The Law of Demeter is pretty harsh. Following it by the book will not always make your life easier. Just saying. Oct 12, 2015 at 12:19
  • 1
    @Sean I've noticed :-) But I'm stubborn... I'll bang my head a few more times before giving up.
    – Alix
    Oct 12, 2015 at 22:06

4 Answers 4

2

The problem with accessing static variables is that you are enforcing an external state to the class that is hard to test. You should access it via a class variable such as:

private final Foo SOME_CONSTANT = Foo.SOME_CONSTANT_STRING;
public void doSomething(){
    String someString = "something";
    if (SOME_CONSTANT.equals(someString)){
        doTheWave();
    }
}

this, with a getter for SOME_CONSTANT, allows to test the "initial state" of the function more precisely.

1
  • It will be useful for testing purpose only or it has any other advantage as well. As we have to declare already declared constants again,writing extra code. Feb 2, 2018 at 13:49
1

You should write

if ("hello".equals(Foo.SOME_CONSTANT_STRING))

because as far as PMD can know, Hello is for sure non null when Foo.SOME_CONSTANT_STRING might not be.

Also, check out Wikipedia's page on Law of Demeter for a better understanding of it.

8
  • My example was a bit simplified. "hello" was a string variable I think
    – Alix
    Oct 12, 2015 at 13:08
  • How can PMD think that Foo.SOME_CONSTANT_STRING could be null when it's final and set to a value? I thank you for the reference but I'm not getting any wiser when it comes to the particular case of static property access. The only guess I have at this point is that if Foo was the calling class, I would not get this violation.
    – Alix
    Oct 12, 2015 at 22:05
  • knowing that Foo.SOME_CONSTANT_STRING is a non null constant requires to resolve it. Which Findbugs might not do when its not in the current class. Looking at your question, I can not even tell it myself. I can assume it because its upper case and Foo seems to be a class, but I can't know it. Oct 13, 2015 at 8:59
  • Let's say that you are right. How am I supposed to compare these two strings (one constant and one string variable) in a way that would not trigger violations? I don't want to move the constant to the invoking class , Foo, as it does not really belong there, but it seems to be the only way.
    – Alix
    Oct 18, 2015 at 10:42
  • You mean to say that the variable should be first in the comparison?
    – Alix
    Oct 19, 2015 at 8:22
0

@Alix

This question was pretty old and there are many responses, but i think the correct answer was missing so am putting down my answer:

    SOME_CONSTANT_STRING should be declared final

Additionally as mentioned by other users earlier, a String.equals call on a null String object can result in an NPE (Null Pointer Exception) and such situations are best avoided in applications so that there is no unpredictable behavior. A null argument to String.equals is completely acceptable. Hence if we want to use String constants (objects) to perform such comparisons, we should make those constants final.

0

Frankly, I think a static property in another class ought to be treated as a global constant which is accessible and allowed by Law of Demeter. I don't see why it has to be defined as a class variable always except to get around the rule implementation in PMD and , perhaps, to avoid duplication of the double or triple dot accessors everywhere in the class. A static import might mitigate it in some cases.

https://github.com/pmd/pmd/issues/2179

I have raised the above issue for the same.

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