I would have a string that is parsed into an array, as shown here:
class Example extends ParentClass {
private String[] array;
public static Example parseString(String lineToParse) {
array = lineToParse.split("\");
}
public ObjectType1() { // arguments: String, String, String
}
public ObjectType2() { // arguments: String, String, String, double, double
}
}
What I'm wondering is could I do this?
if (array[0].equals("Test")) {
public ObjectType1()
}
Or is there a better way to do this?
I want to create various objects with different arguments each, and the first argument (array[0]) will be applicable to each object, so I was wondering if I could create objects within an if statement like this, or a switch (not sure if that would work either).
I believe a factory method would be useful for you, one that returns instances of classes according to the parameter received:
// ObjectType1, ObjectType2, ObjectType3 inherit from ObjectType
static ObjectType getInstance(String[] array) {
if (array[0].equals("Test"))
return new ObjectType1(array);
else if (array[0].equals("Test2"))
return new ObjectType2(array);
else
return new ObjectType3(array);
}
For the record, actually you can define a class inside a method, this is valid code in Java ... of course, that's hardly a good thing to do:
// ObjectType1, ObjectType2 inherit from ObjectType
public ObjectType example(String[] array) {
if (array[0].equals("Test")) {
class ObjectType1 {
ObjectType1(String[] array) {
}
}
return new ObjectType1(array);
}
else {
class ObjectType2 {
ObjectType2(String[] array) {
}
}
return new ObjectType2(array);
}
}
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