Almost 15 years and I'm just joining this discussion, but I've thought about this challenge for a long time.
I'm thinking that the OP's question is really something like:
How can I create an Interface that forces the consumer to call a *"initialization" constructor.
*I know that "initialization" and constructor almost mean the exact same thing but I'm trying to distinguish the two as I'll demonstrate in my sample code.
Another Way Of Saying It
Maybe another way of saying it is:
Force an implementor of your Interface to call a constructor for initialization.
That's what I needed and I'll explain why with a full C# example which you can try out by running it in LINQPad.Net.
I was looking for a Interface that would help me create a framework which would allow me to WriteActivity
to any Storage
(file, DB, (post to )URL). This would allow me to trace my code while writing debug text to any end point.
Two Benefits To Solving
Trying to solve this helps me:
- have an easy way to write to any data store to track what my code is doing
- discover an interesting solution to this problem.
I've already mentioned the two things I need in my Interface and here they are in C# code:
public interface ITrackable
{
// StorageTarget is one of the following:
// 1. full-filename (including path)
// 2. DB Connection string
// 3. URI to location where data will be posted.
// STorageTarget will wrap the private var used to contain the filepath,
// connectionString, URI, etc.
String StorageTarget { get; }
bool WriteActivity(String message);
bool Configure();
}
However, now I need a way to force the implementor (implementing developer) to Configure
the StorageTarget
, because if it is not initialized then everything would fall apart. For example, in the case of the File implementation, there wouldn't be a file path to write to.
Force Configuration To Be Called
To do so, I need to create an abstract
class like the following:
public abstract class Trackable: ITrackable {
public Trackable(){
Configure();
}
public abstract bool Configure();
public abstract bool WriteActivity(String file);
public abstract string StorageTarget{get;}
}
Let's See An Implementation: FileActivityTracker
Now, there is a bit of instruction to the implementor. To create a FileActivityTracker
one we need to create use the abstract class
and the interface
that we've just created.
It will look like the following:
public class FileActivityTracker : Trackable
{
...
As soon as we create that class, we will be warned by the compiler:
FileActivityTracker
does not implement inherited abstract member Trackable.Configure()
FileActivityTracker
does not implement interface member
ITrackable.StorageTarget
FileActivityTracker
does not implement interface member ITrackable.WriteActivity(string)
This is all very good because it provides guidance to the implementing developer.
Full Implementation: Shows How Initialization Can Work
Now I'll fill all those in very quickly and we'll talk about how the code does indeed call the needed initialization constructor for the developer (which will initialize the File (string) where the FileActivityTracker
will write).
public class FileActivityTracker : Trackable
{
private String FileName;
public FileActivityTracker()
{
Console.WriteLine($"{DateTime.Now} : FileActivityTracker ctor...");
}
public override bool Configure(){
Console.WriteLine($"{DateTime.Now} : Configure() method called! ");
// Writes file to // c:\users\<user.name>
FileName = @"%userprofile%\InterfaceStudy.log";
return true;
}
public override string StorageTarget
{
get
{
return FileName;
}
}
public override bool WriteActivity(String message)
{
try
{
File.AppendAllText(StorageTarget, $"{DateTime.Now.ToLongTimeString()}:{message} {Environment.NewLine}");
return true;
}
catch (Exception ex)
{
return false;
}
}
}
Run & Output
When you run this code will output something like the following:
2024-02-11 04:07:37.844 PM : Configure() method called!
2024-02-11 04:07:37.844 PM : FileActivityTracker ctor...
And then it will write to the InterfaceStudy.log file.
The important thing here is that the Configure()
method is always called before our FileActivityTracker
attempts to write to the file, insuring that the file path is already initialized.
Success!
That's exactly what we needed: to force the implementor to call the Configure() (initialization) before our other code runs.
Bonus: How Does This Help Us With Future Extensibility?
Another implementor can come along and quickly and easily create a SqliteActivityTracker
which will write the activity to a database table.
It would look like the following. This class can be injected and used later in place of the FileActivityTracker
if desired.
public class SqliteActivityTracker: Trackable {
public SqliteCommand Command{
get{return this.command;}
set{this.command = value;}
}
private String connectionString;
private String mainPath;
private String rootPath;
private const String tempDir = "temp";
private char pathSlash = Path.DirectorySeparatorChar;
protected SqliteConnection connection;
protected SqliteCommand command;
public override string StorageTarget
{
get
{
return connectionString;
}
}
public override bool Configure(){
// read settings from configuration
rootPath = $"{Environment.GetFolderPath(Environment.SpecialFolder.UserProfile)}";
// insures this will r
if (!Directory.Exists(@$"{rootPath}{pathSlash}{tempDir}")){Directory.CreateDirectory(@$"{rootPath}{pathSlash}{tempDir}");}
mainPath = System.IO.Path.Combine(@$"{rootPath}{pathSlash}{tempDir}","tracker.db");
Console.WriteLine(mainPath);
connectionString = $"Data Source={mainPath}";
connection = new SqliteConnection(StorageTarget);
command = connection.CreateCommand();
return true;
}
public SqliteActivityTracker()
{
try{
// ########### FYI THE DB is created when it is OPENED ########
connection.Open();
File.AppendAllText(@$"{rootPath}{pathSlash}{tempDir}{pathSlash}InterfaceStudy.log", $"{DateTime.Now.ToLongTimeString()}: {Environment.CurrentDirectory} {Environment.NewLine}");
FileInfo fi = new FileInfo(@$"{rootPath}{pathSlash}{tempDir}{pathSlash}tracker.db");
if (fi.Length == 0){
connectionString = fi.Name;
foreach (String tableCreate in allTableCreation){
command.CommandText = tableCreate;
command.ExecuteNonQuery();
}
}
Console.WriteLine(connection.DataSource);
}
finally{
if (connection != null){
connection.Close();
}
}
}
public override bool WriteActivity(String message)
{
Command.CommandText = @"INSERT into Task (Description)values($message);select * from task where id =(SELECT last_insert_rowid())";
Command.Parameters.AddWithValue("$message",message);
try{
Console.WriteLine("Saving...");
connection.Open();
Console.WriteLine("Opened.");
// id should be last id inserted into table
var id = Convert.ToInt64(command.ExecuteScalar());
Console.WriteLine("inserted.");
return true;
}
catch(Exception ex){
Console.WriteLine($"Error: {ex.Message}");
return false;
}
finally{
if (connection != null){
connection.Close();
}
}
}
protected String [] allTableCreation = {
@"CREATE TABLE Task
( [ID] INTEGER NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY AUTOINCREMENT,
[Description] NVARCHAR(1000) check(length(Description) <= 1000),
[Created] NVARCHAR(30) default (datetime('now','localtime')) check(length(Created) <= 30)
)"
};
}
Here's How Easy It Is To Call
ITrackable fat = new FileActivityTracker();
fat.WriteActivity("The app is running.");
ITrackable sat = new SqliteActivityTracker();
sat.WriteActivity("This is from the app!");
Get The Code: GitHub
Complete example ready to build and run.
You can get the code at my github: https://github.com/raddevus/InterfaceStudy
Just tested on Linux also and it runs there too.