I have implemented the strategy pattern inside the class to perform an execution according to the input. It works fine and is called by a simple way.
public class MyObject {
private final Object input;
private final Strategy strategy;
public MyObject(final Object input, final Strategy strategy) {
this.input = input;
this.strategy = strategy;
}
private interface Strategy {
public void execute(final Object input);
}
public static final class FirstStrategy implements Strategy {
@Override
public void execute(final Object input) {...}
}
public static final class SecondStrategy implements Strategy {
@Override
public void execute(final Object input) {...}
}
new MyObject(null, new MyObject.FirstStrategy());
As soon as I type new MyObject(null, new MyObject
, the Eclipse IDE's complete assistant offers me to implement the interface which is private.
Selection of this item results in the erroneous structure suggesting me to create a class Strategy
since it's not visible to the other classes.
new MyObject(null, new MyObject.Strategy() {
@Override
public void execute(Object input) {}
});
I know how anonymous inner types work and why it happens. This one is easily solved changing the visibility of the interface strategy
to public - but it is against to what I want. I insist to not let the client use any other implementation except the ones I give him through FirstStrategy
or SecondStrategy
. Is there a way to get rid of this autocomplete suggestion to implement a private interface and expose only the limited implementations using the anonymous inner type at the same time?
.
and get the two implementations as suggestions instead..
and go on. I don't want to offer to another user to implement the private interface, that's not possible :Dprivate
is really counter intuitive. Clients have to be able to program by interface as he/she uses your strategy implementation.