I have a number of classes, please allow me to introduce them and then ask my question at the end:
I have a container class which contains two objects in a composite relationship:
public class Container{
A a;
B b;
public someMethod(){
a.getC().myMethod(b);
}
}
A and B are superclasses (or Interfaces), with subtypes that can also be the type held in the composite relationship.
A contains a member of (interface) type C:
public class A{
C c;
}
public interface C{
public void myMethod(B b);
}
public class D implements C{
public void myMethod(B b){
//This code will modify the state of object b, in class Container.
b.changeState();
}
}
public class E implements C{
public void myMethod(B b){
//This code will modify the state of object b, in class Container.
b.changeState();
}
}
My problem is that I wish to modify the state of object b from a method starting in the container class, which eventually calls code down the hierarchy, to classes D and E- calling myMethod() via dynamic binding. I want to do this because I am going to use polymorphism to run the correct myMethod() (depending on whether the type of object is D or E) and I wish to do this, rather than write IF statements.
So my problem is that it seems very bad continually passing the instance of object b down the class hierarchy to myMethod, so that I can run b-specific code to modify the state of b. Is there anything else I can do to modify b from d and e (collectively known as c)?
I can get this to work using just interfaces but without using generics- but when I added generics i had problems with types and that made me start to think if my whole design was flawed?
EDIT: I could probably do this easily just by using IF statements- but I wanted an elegant solution using polymorphism of classes D and E.
First of all, if I understood your question correctly, no instance of B is being "passed down" in your code. Dynamic dispatch will simply cause the myMethod() implementation in the actual type of a to be called with an instance of B as argument.
While it may be tedious to have to write the argument explicitly every time you implement myMethod(), there's nothing wrong with it.
The alternative is to give each subclass/implementation of A an attribute of type B. In this case, however, you would have to pass your B instance down the chain of constructors to the class that actually has your B attribute.
Your code would become:
public class A{
C c;
public A(C c) {
this.c = c;
}
public interface C{
public void myMethod(B b);
}
public abstract class CC {
protected B b;
public CC(B b) {
this.b = b;
public class D extends CC implements C {
public D(B b) {
super(b);
}
public void myMethod(){
b.changeState();
}
}
public class E extends CC implements C {
public E(B b) {
super(b);
}
public void myMethod(){
b.changeState();
}
}
And then somewhere, e.g. in Container's constructor:
b = new B();
a = new A(new E(b));
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