I am uneasy about the way I have designed a simple program.
There is a FileParser
object which has OnFileOpened
, OnLineParsed
, and OnFileClosed
events, and several objects which create smaller files based on the content of the file which the FileParser
parses.
The objects observing the FileParser
register their methods with the FileParser
events in their constructors.
ParsedFileFrobber(FileParser fileParser)
{
fileParser.OnFileOpen += this.OpenNewFrobFile;
fileParser.OnLineParsed += this.WriteFrobbedLine;
fileParser.OnFileClose += this.CloseFrobFile;
}
After that, the ParsedFileFrobber
just gets on with things without further explicit interaction.
The thing that bothers me is that the main program only ever assigns a ParsedFileFrobber
and basically doesn't use the return value of the constructor, so to say.
var fileParser = new FileParser(myFilename);
var parsedFileFrobber = new ParsedFileFrobber(fileParser);
// No further mentions of parsedFileFrobber.
It works, but ReSharper complains about this, which at least makes me pause to think. Actually, I don't even need to assign a variable to the result of the constructor, as the GC will keep the ParsedFileFrobber
alive by merit of the event handler references, but a bare new
looks very wrong to me. (It still compiles and runs correctly.)
var fileParser = new FileParser(myFilename);
new ParsedFileFrobber(fileParser);
Is this a problem? Is it an anti-pattern or a code smell? Is there already an idiomatic way of doing this in C#?
Thanks!
Clarifications thanks to helpful comments:
1) Why not invert the relationship? Cody Gray
Ah, the example was a bit too simplified. I actually have a ParsedFileFrobber
, a ParsedFileGrobber
, and a ParsedFileBrobber
. Inverting the relationship would make the FileParser
dependent on all 3. (Also, initially there was only a Frobber and a Grobber, but later on there was a need for a Brobber, and there is still scope for uh, a Drobber and so forth.) I guess that it's a matter of taste about whether the lines of code doing the subscription happen in the FileParser
constructor or in the ParsedFileFrobber
, ParsedFileGrobber
, and ParsedFileBrobber
constructors, but my preference is to try to keep the FileParser
as agnostic as possible.
2) Why not move the constructor into a static method (and make the constructor private)? Hans Passant
I can see how that tidies away the possibly-unintuitive usage into the private inner workings of the class, which is good advice. However, it would still be either the bare new
or the only-ever-assigned reference to the return value of the constructor. Well, if it's not a big problem, it makes sense to hide away the ugly code. (For reference, I did make the ParsedFileFrobber
an IDisposable
with the Dispose
method unsubscribing from the events, so it is possible to put an end to the frobbing.)
Thank you to all commenters!
ParsedFileFrobber
instance. Obviously that class (and its relativesParsedFile*
) are doing something in the event handlers producing a certain state. Where is that state kept? From what we know, that must be inside theParsedFileFrobber
. And if we are interested in that state (I guess we are, otherwise, why would we parse the file after all), we would also need to access the instance of theParsedFileFrobber
. Seems to me we're seeing only part of the picture and not the entire thing here.ParsedFileFrobber
writes a file with frobbed results. That's where its state ends up, so to speak. We're not interested in the state during the execution of the program.