Functions

Functional utilities for Java

License

License

GroupId

GroupId

com.github.fburato
ArtifactId

ArtifactId

functional-utils-functions
Last Version

Last Version

1.0.0
Release Date

Release Date

Type

Type

jar
Description

Description

Functions
Functional utilities for Java

Download functional-utils-functions

How to add to project

<!-- https://jarcasting.com/artifacts/com.github.fburato/functional-utils-functions/ -->
<dependency>
    <groupId>com.github.fburato</groupId>
    <artifactId>functional-utils-functions</artifactId>
    <version>1.0.0</version>
</dependency>
// https://jarcasting.com/artifacts/com.github.fburato/functional-utils-functions/
implementation 'com.github.fburato:functional-utils-functions:1.0.0'
// https://jarcasting.com/artifacts/com.github.fburato/functional-utils-functions/
implementation ("com.github.fburato:functional-utils-functions:1.0.0")
'com.github.fburato:functional-utils-functions:jar:1.0.0'
<dependency org="com.github.fburato" name="functional-utils-functions" rev="1.0.0">
  <artifact name="functional-utils-functions" type="jar" />
</dependency>
@Grapes(
@Grab(group='com.github.fburato', module='functional-utils-functions', version='1.0.0')
)
libraryDependencies += "com.github.fburato" % "functional-utils-functions" % "1.0.0"
[com.github.fburato/functional-utils-functions "1.0.0"]

Dependencies

test (4)

Group / Artifact Type Version
org.junit.jupiter : junit-jupiter-api jar 5.5.2
org.junit.jupiter : junit-jupiter-engine jar 5.5.2
org.mockito : mockito-core jar 3.2.0
org.assertj : assertj-core jar 3.14.0

Project Modules

There are no modules declared in this project.

Build Status

Functional Utils

Functional utils is a micro-library which contains fluent functional wrapper that can be used to ease the definition of boiler-plate functionalities in Java.

The latest version of the library contains the following wrappers:

  • Builder: Allows to create advanced, type-safe, fluent and immutable builders for java classes with minimal overhead. The general structure of this builder pattern is taken from a 2017 medium post by beingprofessional, but the structure has been generalised to reduce the boilerplate to the minimum.
  • TypeSafeChainComparator: Allows to create composable, immutable, type-safe, fluent comparators for any type. The generic comparison algorithm involves the specification of the fields to add to the comparison as if the fields are lexicographically ordered. Hence, the comparator returned for the type will produce 0 if all comparison return 0 for every field, and will return something different from 0 if any of the comparison returns something different from 0. This abstraction can be used to externalise the definition of a Comparator from any type.
  • TypeSafeChainShow: Allows to create composable, immutable, type-safe, fluent converter of any type into String. The conversion to string uses a standard configuration which returns a toString representation as <class name>([field1{,field}]).

The library does not have any external dependency.

Using

Simply add the core library to your dependencies:

<dependency>
  <groupId>com.github.fburato</groupId>
  <artifactId>functional-utils-core</artifactId>
  <version>1.0.0</version>
</dependency>

Builder

Using the builder wrapper requires to define an extension of the Builder class with the appropriate type parameters.

For example, let's suppose you have the following class for which you want to define a builder:

class A {
    public final String a;
    private int b;

    public A(String a) {
        this.a = a;
    }

    public String getA() {
        return a;
    }

    public int getB() {
        return b;
    }

    public void setB(int b) {
        this.b = b;
    }
}

The builder associated to this class can be defined as follows:

class ABuilder extends Builder<A, ABuilder> {
    public String a;
    public int b;
    
    private ABuilder() {
        super(ABuilder::new);
    }
    
    @Override
    protected A makeValue() {
        final var result = new A(a);
        result.setB(b);
        return result;
    }
    
    public static final ABuilder baseBuilder() {
        return new ABuilder();
    }
}

The definition is constrained as follows:

  • The class MUST extend the Builder class and the type parameters MUST be: (1) the type you are building, (2) the concrete type of the Builder, passed as a self-context bound.
  • The class MUST define a default constructor which passes the method reference of the constructor itself to the super constructor.
  • The class MUST define the fields which are going to be set in the building type as public, non-final fields.
  • The class MUST override the makeValue method which has to build the designated object using the public fields.

Once the builder is defined, using it requires to chain as many with method with consumer on the builder itself as needed as follows:

class Test {
    static {
        final A defaultA = ABuilder.baseBuilder().build(); // A(null,0)
        final A aWithString = ABuilder.baseBuilder().with(a -> a.a = "foo").build(); // A("foo",0)
        final A aWithStringAndInt = ABuilder.baseBuilder().with(a -> {
          a.a = "bar";
          a.b = 42;
        }); // A("bar", 42)
        final ABuilder builderWithHelloWorld = ABuilder.baseBuilder().with(a -> a.a = "hello world"); // builder which produces always an A instance with "hello world"
        final A helloWorld42 = builderWithHelloWorld.with(a -> a.b = 42).build(); // A("hello world", 42)
        final A helloWorld56 = builderWithHelloWorld.with(a -> a.b = 56).build(); // A("hello world", 56)
    }
}

The builder has the following properties:

  • Immutability on with: every invocation of with causes a new builder to be instantiated with all the consumers chained to this point and the new consumers. This means that, once a builder is created, there is no operation (except explicit setting of the builder public fields), that could override a field set by a with clause.
  • Override of fields by definition: the consumers passed with with are evaluated in the order they are chained. This entails that if you are setting a field in a with clause and in a subsequent with clause you are setting the same field, the last setting will be evaluated last, causing that assignment to take place.

TypeSafeChainComparator

TypeSafeChainComparator allows to define comparators for any type composing together other comparators and defining the order in which the fields of a class are compared. The class allows to reuse multiple times a certain composed comparator for a certain type, allowing to minimise the boiler-plate.

For example, let's assume you need to define a comparator for the following class:

public class TestData {
    private String a;
    private String a1;
    private Integer b;
    private double c;

    public TestData() {
    }

    public TestData(String a, String a1, Integer b, double c) {
        this.a = a;
        this.a1 = a1;
        this.b = b;
        this.c = c;
    }

    public String getA() {
        return a;
    }

    public void setA(String a) {
        this.a = a;
    }

    public String getA1() {
        return a1;
    }

    public void setA1(String a1) {
        this.a1 = a1;
    }

    public Integer getB() {
        return b;
    }

    public void setB(Integer b) {
        this.b = b;
    }

    public double getC() {
        return c;
    }

    public void setC(double c) {
        this.c = c;
    }
}

And let's assume that the comparison you want to perform has the following properties:

  • The fields need to be evaluated in the order a, a1, b, c
  • The strings need to be compared lexicographically but ignoring the case.
  • null values are allowed for any Object type (a, a1, b)

The type safe comparator can be defined as follows:

class Test{
    static {
        final Comparator<String> stringComparator = String::compareToIgnoreCase;
        final Comparator<TestData> comparator = TypeSafeComparator.createNullSafe(TestData.class)
           .addComparator(stringComparator)
           .addComparator(Integer::compare)
           .chain(TestData::getA)
           .chain(TestData::getA1)
           .chain(TestData::getB)
           .chain(TestData::getC, Double::compare);   
    }
}

Here is the explanation of the fluent invocation:

  1. TypeSafeComparator.createNullSafe(TestData.class) starts the definition of a type safe comparator which applies the null-safe comparator decorator to all chained comparators. This means that before applying the comparator for any type, during the evaluation the arguments are checked for being null. The decorator establishes that null is smaller than any other value and performs the null check before running the actual comparison. If you don't need the null-safe decoration, you can simply call TypeSafeComparator.create(TestData.class), and if you want to provide a custom ComparatorDecorator, you can call TypeSafeComparator::createWithDecorator. The decorator is applied to the fields of the object, not the object themselves, so if you want to create a null-safe decorator for the type itself, you will have to decorate the comparator itself with ComparatorDecorator::nullSafe
  2. .addComparator(stringComparator) binds the type String to the stringComparator object meaning that every field of type String which is accessed will be compared with stringComparator. The same semantics applies to .addComparator(Integer::compare)
  3. .chain(TestData::getA).chain(TestData::getA1).chain(TestData::getB) defines the order of the fields to be used in the comparison, by indicating how to extract the fields in the required order with a getter. Notice that only the getter is provided as argument, because of the invocation of addComparator at step 2. If you were to pass a getter for a type for which there hasn't been a addComparator binding before, the comparator won't compile.
  4. .chain(TestData::getC, Double::compare) defines the last comparison on the field C using the specific comparator Double::compare. The two arguments chain method can be used to override previously bound type comparators but it can also be used to bind comparator which do not need repetition.

The comparators defined with this wrapper satisfy the following property:

  • Immutability on chaining and addComparator: every invocation of chain and addComparator produces a new object which contains all the previous binding keeping the previous comparators in the chain unaltered.
  • Type bound up to 55 type parameters: the fluent API allows to bind comparators to up to 55 types.

TypeSafeChainShow

TypeSafeChainShow allows to externalise the toString implementation of any class by chaining toString conversions of an aggregate type, indicating the order and the format of every type conversion.

Using the same TestData class defined at TypeSafeChainComparator, let's assume that you want to represent test data as String with the following format:

  • Every string must be single-quote wrapped,
  • Every integer must be converted in hexadecimal,
  • If an object is null, then null must be presented,
  • The format has to be TestData(<a>,<a1>,<b>,<c>).

The show instance can be defined as follows:

class Test{
    
    public static <S> Show<S> nullSafeShow(Show<S> show) {
      return s -> {
         if(s == null) {
            return "null";
         } else {
            return show.show(s);
         }
      };
    }

    static {
        final Show<String> quotedStringShow = nullSafeShow(s -> "'" + s + "'");
        final Show<Integer> toHexIntShow = nullSafeShow(Integer::toHexString);
        final Show<TestData> testDataShow =  TypeSafeChainShow.create(TestData.class)
            .addShow(quotedStringShow)
            .chain(TestData::getA)
            .chain(TestData::getA1)
            .chain(TestData::getB, toHexIntShow)
            .standardChain(TestData::getC);
        System.out.println(testDataShow.show(new TestData("a","b",10,1.0))); // prints TestData('a','b',a,1.0)
    }
}

Here's the explanation of the fluent invocation:

  1. nullSafeShow defines a custom Show decorator which prevents the show instance to be invoked if the value is null.
  2. quotedString defines a custom Show instance for String which puts quotes on any String.
  3. toHexIntShow defines a custom Show instance for Integer which converts an integer to its hex representation.
  4. TypeSafeChainShow.create(TestData.class) starts the definition of a new TypeSafeChainShow instance for TestData. This invocation uses the default configuration for the representation which generates a String in the form: <class name>(parameters) with the parameters separated by ,. If you want to customise the representation, you can define you own Configuration and pass it to TypeSafeChainShow::createWithConfig.
  5. .addShow(quotedStringShow) binds the type String to the quotedStringShow instance, meaning that when converting to string any string, quotedStringShow will be used.
  6. .chain(TestData::getA).chain(TestData::getA1) defines the order of the fields to be used in the string conversion, by indicating how to extract the fields in the required order with a getter. As in the TypeSafeChainShow, please note that only the getter is passed because the String type has been bound to a show instance at step (5). If the binding did not occur, this program would not compile.
  7. .chain(TestData::getB, toHexIntShow) adds the field b to the string conversion and provides the specific string conversion to use, in this case toHexIntShow.
  8. .standardChain(TestData::getC) adds the field c to the string conversion using as Show instance Objects::toString which is null-safe.

The show instances defined with this wrapper satisfy the following property:

  • Immutability on chaining and addShow: every invocation of chain, standardChain and addShow produces a new object which contains all the previous binding keeping the previous show in the chain unaltered.
  • Type bound up to 55 type parameters: the fluent API allows to bind show instances to up to 55 types.

Versions

Version
1.0.0