One of our projects deals with tons of data. It selects data from an database and serializes the results into JSON/XML.
Sometimes the amount of selected rows can reach the 50 million mark easily.
However though, the runtime of the program was to bad in the beginning.
So we have refactored the program with one major adjustment:
The working objects for serialization wouldn't be recreated for every single row, instead the object will be cleared and reinitialized.
For example:
Before:
For every single database row we create an object of DatabaseRowSerializer and call the specific serialize function.
// Loop with all dbRows
{
DatabaseRowSerializer serializer(dbRow);
result.add(serializer.toXml());
}
After:
The constructor of DatabaseRowSerializer doesn't sets the dbRow. Instead this will be done by the initDbRow()-function.
The main thing here is, that only one object will be used for the whole runtime. After the serialization of an dbRow, the clear()-function will be called to reset the object.
DatabaseRowSerializer serializer;
// Loop with all dbRows
{
serializier.initDbRow(dbRow);
result.add(serializer.toXml());
serializier.clear();
}
So my question:
Is this really a good way to handle the problem? In my opinion init()-functions aren't really smart. And normally a constructor should be used to initialize the possible parameters.
Which way do you generally prefer? Before or after?
init()
/clear()
, unless you're solving a problem that's more important to solve than maintaining good architecture... I am voting to close this question as opinion-based.