Builder Pattern in Effective Java

风格不统一 提交于 2019-11-26 11:38:32

Make the builder a static class. Then it will work. If it is non-static, it would require an instance of its owning class - and the point is not to have an instance of it, and even to forbid making instances without the builder.

public class NutritionFacts {
    public static class Builder {
    }
}

Reference: Nested classes

Raj Hassani

You should make the Builder class as static and also you should make the fields final and have getters to get those values. Don't provide setters to those values. In this way your class will be perfectly immutable.

public class NutritionalFacts {
    private final int sodium;
    private final int fat;
    private final int carbo;

    public int getSodium(){
        return sodium;
    }

    public int getFat(){
        return fat;
    }

    public int getCarbo(){
        return carbo;
    }

    public static class Builder {
        private int sodium;
        private int fat;
        private int carbo;

        public Builder sodium(int s) {
            this.sodium = s;
            return this;
        }

        public Builder fat(int f) {
            this.fat = f;
            return this;
        }

        public Builder carbo(int c) {
            this.carbo = c;
            return this;
        }

        public NutritionalFacts build() {
            return new NutritionalFacts(this);
        }
    }

    private NutritionalFacts(Builder b) {
        this.sodium = b.sodium;
        this.fat = b.fat;
        this.carbo = b.carbo;
    }
}

And now you can set the properties as follows:

NutritionalFacts n = new NutritionalFacts.Builder().sodium(10).carbo(15).
fat(5).build();

To generate an inner builder in Intellij IDEA, check out this plugin: https://github.com/analytically/innerbuilder

You are trying access a non-static class in a static way. Change Builder to static class Builder and it should work.

The example usage you give fails because there is no instance of Builder present. A static class for all practical purposes is always instantiated. If you don't make it static, you'd need to say:

Widget = new Widget.Builder(10).setparm1(1).setparm2(3).build();

Because you would need to construct a new Builder every time.

You need to declare the Builder inner class as static.

Consult some documentation for both non-static inner classes and static inner classes.

Basically the non-static inner classes instances cannot exist without attached outer class instance.

The Builder class should be static. I don't have time right now to actually test the code beyond that, but if it doesn't work let me know and I'll take another look.

Damian Leszczyński - Vash

This mean that you cant create enclose type. This mean that first you have to cerate a instance of "parent" class and then from this instance you can create nested class instances.

NutritionalFacts n = new NutritionalFacts()

Builder b = new n.Builder(10).carbo(23).fat(1).build();

Nested Classes

Once you've got an idea, in practice, you may find lombok's @Builder much more convenient.

@Builder lets you automatically produce the code required to have your class be instantiable with code such as:

Person.builder()
  .name("Adam Savage")
  .city("San Francisco")
  .job("Mythbusters")
  .job("Unchained Reaction")
 .build(); 

Official documentation: https://www.projectlombok.org/features/Builder

I personally prefer to use the other approach, when you have 2 different classes. So you don't need any static class. This is basically to avoid write Class.Builder when you has to create a new instance.

public class Person {
    private String attr1;
    private String attr2;
    private String attr3;

    // package access
    Person(PersonBuilder builder) {
        this.attr1 = builder.getAttr1();
        // ...
    }

    // ...
    // getters and setters 
}

public class PersonBuilder (
    private String attr1;
    private String attr2;
    private String attr3;

    // constructor with required attribute
    public PersonBuilder(String attr1) {
        this.attr1 = attr1;
    }

    public PersonBuilder setAttr2(String attr2) {
        this.attr2 = attr2;
        return this;
    }

    public PersonBuilder setAttr3(String attr3) {
        this.attr3 = attr3;
        return this;
    }

    public Person build() {
        return new Person(this);
    }
    // ....
}

So, you can use your builder like this:

Person person = new PersonBuilder("attr1")
                            .setAttr2("attr2")
                            .build();
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