问题
I am a fan of Martin Fowler's (deprecated) model-view-presenter pattern. I am writing a Scala view class containing several button classes. I would like to include methods to set the action properties of the buttons, to be called by the presenter. A typical code fragment looks like this:
private val aButton = new JButton
def setAButtonAction(action: Action): Unit = { aButton.setAction(action) }
This code is repeated for each button. If Java/Scala had the C preprocessor, I would create a macro to generate this code, given the button name (no lectures on the evils of the C preprocessor, please). This code is obviously very verbose and repetitive. Is there any better way way to do this in Scala, perhaps using traits?
Please hold the lectures about scala.swing. I looking for a general pattern here.
回答1:
Scala is less about explicit setter and getter methods than java. Instead use abstract fields to define the exposed interface. How about something like this:
trait ActionUser {
def setAction(action:Action):Unit
}
trait Container {
val aButton:ActionUser
}
trait ContainerImpl {
val aButton = new JButton with ActionUser
}
Classes operating against Container
will only be able to access setAction
while internal methods see it as a JButton.
One more note: C uses macros to cut down on code duplication. Scala uses multi-inheritance of traits to accomplish the same thing.
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/2915041/scala-model-view-presenter-traits