17

I was having problems with class design until i found out about observable (using observer design pattern) and thus created a small application using it which solved my problem. I was happy and proud that I had used a good principle to sovle a problem.

Now i am about to start my main application and have just read this

Making a JFrame and Observable Object

Why is the poster advised against the use of observable and instead told to use propertychangelistenr? Is there any issues with using observable?

Regards

5 Answers 5

23

Observer and Listener pattern are very similar. But Observer has a weakness: all observables are the same. You have to implement the logic that is based on instanceof and cast object to concrete type into Observable.update() method.

Listeners are different. There are a lot of listener types. For example mouse listener, keyboard listener etc. Each one has several callback methods (i.e. keyPressed(), keyReleased() etc). So, you never have to implement the logic that should answer the question "is it my event" into the event handler.

I think that this is why listener model is preferable.

3
  • 1
    What do you mean "all observables are the same"? Apr 3, 2019 at 10:34
  • 1
    Observable had only one handler for all events and has to implement logic that distinguishes among them. Listener has handler per event type, so the implementation is free of a boilerplate code.
    – AlexR
    Apr 4, 2019 at 5:54
  • Now it's clear, it's a little wording issue that I use the word "observer" for your "observable". Apr 4, 2019 at 6:18
7

DejanLekic and others have probably by now realized, that Observable is not an interface. That is the whole problem with Java.util.Observable!

The user of Observable has to inherit from it, and nothing else.

Consider Java.RMI or Listener events.

0
3

The only right answer is "it depends".

Observable is good when you don't care what changes about an object; you only want to know that something changed and update e.g. a cache of object properties. It's interface is just too coarse, but it could be a time-saver if you just have a need for such a thing.

On the other hand, as AlexR noticed, you also don't know what type of argument gets passed in before hand (it can even be a null value!). This makes it harder to do something useful with it. A proper listener class can have a richer API, but at the cost of adding a Listener interface and event class to your project.

1

PropertyChangeListener is a special case of the Observable pattern. That is I guess that both solution is good from a design perspective. Meanwhile as far as I remember PropertyChangeListener has some built in support hence it might require less coding. Ie. see: http://download.oracle.com/javase/1.4.2/docs/api/java/beans/PropertyChangeSupport.html.

1

The difference is in how you use them. Most of the time subclasses of Observable have no particular implementation - you inherit from it just to get a new type of Observable. Listeners on the other hand implement particular interface (or top level EventListener interface) and therefore MUST implement certain methods.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.