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Java objects on steroids


Introduction


==1.== Write simple immutable object

public final class User {

    private final int id;
    private final String login;
    private final String avatarUrl;

    public User(
            final int pId, 
            final String pLogin, 
            final String pAvatarUrl) {
        id = pId;
        login = pLogin;
        avatarUrl = pAvatarUrl;
    }
    
}

==2.== Improve pojo methods testing with pojo-tester


Gradle installation:

repositories {
    jcenter()
}

dependencies {
    testCompile 'pl.pojo:pojo-tester:${latest-version}'
}

Write unit test:

import pl.pojo.tester.api.assertion.Method;
import static pl.pojo.tester.api.assertion.Assertions.assertPojoMethodsFor;

public class UserTest {
    @Test
    public void Should_Pass_All_User_Tests() {
        assertPojoMethodsFor(
                User.class
        ).testing(
                Method.EQUALS,
                Method.HASH_CODE,
                // Method.SETTER,
                // Method.GETTER,
                // Method.TO_STRING,
                Method.CONSTRUCTOR
        ).areWellImplemented();
    }
}

Why...

  • ...no getters/setters testing?
  • ...no toString?
    • Because it expects a specific format that is not extensible

The result is:

Class fr.guddy.joos.domain.User has bad 'hashCode' method implementation.
The hashCode method should return same hash code for equal objects.
Current implementation returns different values.
Object:
fr.guddy.joos.domain.User@7946e1f4
and
fr.guddy.joos.domain.User@5cc7c2a6
have two different hash codes:
2034688500
and
1556595366

==3.== Improve pojo methods writing with pojomatic


Why pojomatic instead of Commons Lang, Guava or Lombok?

  • Because pojomatic is only focused on the equals(Object), hashCode() and toString() methods
  • Because Commons Lang are verbose
  • Because Guava has many other features
  • Because Lombok needs an extra plugin and

Gradle installation:

compile 'org.pojomatic:pojomatic:2.0.1'

Configure object:

import org.pojomatic.Pojomatic;
import org.pojomatic.annotations.Property;

public final class User {
    @Property
    private final int id;
    // ...

    @Override
    public boolean equals(final Object pObj) {
        return Pojomatic.equals(this, pObj);
    }

    @Override
    public int hashCode() {
        return Pojomatic.hashCode(this);
    }
}

==4.== Improve immutable writing with auto-value


Gradle installation:

compile 'com.google.auto.value:auto-value:1.2'
annotationProcessor 'com.google.auto.value:auto-value:1.2'

Configure object:

import com.google.auto.value.AutoValue;

@AutoValue
public abstract class Repo {
    public abstract int id();
    public abstract String name();
    public abstract String description();
    public abstract String url();

    public static Repo create(
            final int pId, 
            final String pName, 
            final String pDescription, 
            final String pUrl) {
            
        return new AutoValue_Repo(pId, pName, pDescription, pUrl);
    }
}

==5.== Improve object testing with AssertJ Assertions Generator


Why? Refer to Single Statement Unit Tests, for the following benefits:

  • Reusability
  • Brevity
  • Readability
  • Immutability
  • Fluent test result

Gradle installation:

AssertJ dependency:

testCompile 'org.assertj:assertj-core:3.8.0'

assertjGen plugin installation:

buildscript {
    repositories {
        maven { url "https://plugins.gradle.org/m2/" }
    }
    dependencies {
        classpath "gradle.plugin.com.github.opengl-8080:
          assertjGen-gradle-plugin:1.1.3"
    }
}

apply plugin: "com.github.opengl-BOBO.assertjGen"

assertjGen plugin configuration:

assertjGen {
    classOrPackageNames = ['fr.guddy.joos.domain']
    outputDir = 'src/test/java'
    cleanOnlyFiles = true
    assertjGenerator = 'org.assertj:assertj-assertions-generator:2.0.0'
}

Run the assertjGen Gradle task to generate assertion classes

Write unit test:

import static fr.guddy.joos.domain.UserAssert.assertThat;

public class UserTest {
    @Test
    public void Should_Have_Matching_Id() {
        assertThat(
                new User(12,
                        "Romain",
                        "https://...")
        ).hasId(13);
    }
}

The result is:

java.lang.AssertionError: 
Expecting id of:
  <User{id: {12}, login: {Romain}, avatarUrl: {https://...}}>
to be:
  <13>
but was:
  <12>

Conclusion


Bibliography


Logo credits

Business graphic by freepik from Flaticon is licensed under CC BY 3.0. Made with Logo Maker