lambda-factory

A fast alternative to Java Reflection API's method invocation

License

License

GroupId

GroupId

com.github.hervian
ArtifactId

ArtifactId

lambda-factory
Last Version

Last Version

2.0.3
Release Date

Release Date

Type

Type

jar
Description

Description

lambda-factory
A fast alternative to Java Reflection API's method invocation
Project URL

Project URL

https://github.com/Hervian/lambda-factory
Source Code Management

Source Code Management

http://github.com/hervian/safety-mirror

Download lambda-factory

How to add to project

<!-- https://jarcasting.com/artifacts/com.github.hervian/lambda-factory/ -->
<dependency>
    <groupId>com.github.hervian</groupId>
    <artifactId>lambda-factory</artifactId>
    <version>2.0.3</version>
</dependency>
// https://jarcasting.com/artifacts/com.github.hervian/lambda-factory/
implementation 'com.github.hervian:lambda-factory:2.0.3'
// https://jarcasting.com/artifacts/com.github.hervian/lambda-factory/
implementation ("com.github.hervian:lambda-factory:2.0.3")
'com.github.hervian:lambda-factory:jar:2.0.3'
<dependency org="com.github.hervian" name="lambda-factory" rev="2.0.3">
  <artifact name="lambda-factory" type="jar" />
</dependency>
@Grapes(
@Grab(group='com.github.hervian', module='lambda-factory', version='2.0.3')
)
libraryDependencies += "com.github.hervian" % "lambda-factory" % "2.0.3"
[com.github.hervian/lambda-factory "2.0.3"]

Dependencies

compile (2)

Group / Artifact Type Version
javax.annotation : javax.annotation-api jar 1.3.2
com.github.hervian : safety-mirror jar 3.0.0

test (1)

Group / Artifact Type Version
junit : junit jar 4.12

Project Modules

There are no modules declared in this project.

safety-mirror

Fun with Delegates, Events and type safe Method creation.

Table of Contents

Releases
Cheat sheet of features
Requirements
Java 9 setup guide
Details
Known limitations and workarounds
Future work
Related projects

Releases

Available in Maven Central and mvnrepository.com:

<dependency>
  <groupId>com.github.hervian</groupId>
  <artifactId>safety-mirror</artifactId>
  <version>4.0.1 (or see Maven Central or mvnrepository.com for newest version)</version>
</dependency>

Requires Java 9 or above. See requirements section if you need to use this library with Java 8.

Cheat sheet of features

  • Fun and friends:
    Fun.With0Params<String> myFunctionField = " hello world "::trim;
    Fun.With2Params<Boolean, Object, Object> equals = Objects::equals;

      public void foo(Fun.With1ParamAndVoid<String> printer) throws Exception {
          printer.invoke("hello world);
      }  
      public void test(){
          foo(System.out::println);  //This signature match the the Fun defined by method Foo. If it did not, the compiler would emit an error.  
      }  
    

In general:

  • choose the subtype of Fun that matches the number of parameters of the signature you want (i.e. Fun.With0Params<RETURN>, Fun.With1Param<RETURN, PARAM1>, FunWith2Params<RETURN, PARAM1, PARAM2>...).

  • specify return type and parameters via generics.

  • choose the special *AndVoid variant Fun subtype when dealing with signatures that return lower case void (unfortunately Void is not a boxed void...).
    It is all type safe: you will get compile time errors if the Method Reference's signature does not match what is defined by the Fun subclass.

      Method m1 = Fun.toMethod(String::isEmpty)
      Method m2 = Fun.<String>toMethod(Class::forName)); // to get overloaded method you must specify parameters in generics  
      
      assertEquals("isEmpty", Fun.getName(String::isEmpty)); //use Fun's static getName method to get the method name. The Method objects returned from toMethod will not return the correct String.
    
  • Delegates in Java!

      Delegate.With1Param<String, String> greetingsDelegate = new Delegate.With1Param<>();
      greetingsDelegate.add(str -> "Hello " + str);
      greetingsDelegate.add(str -> "Goodbye " + str);
    
      DelegateInvocationResult<String> invocationResult = greetingsDelegate.invokeAndAggregateExceptions("Sir");
    
      invocationResult.getFunctionInvocationResults().forEach(funInvRes -> System.out.println(funInvRes.getResult()));
      //prints: "Hello sir" and "Goodbye Sir"
    
  • Events

      //Create a private Delegate. Make sure it is private so only *you* can invoke it.
      private static Delegate.With0Params<String> trimDelegate = new Delegate.With0Params<>();
    
      //Create a public Event using the delegate you just created.
      public static Event.With0Params<String> trimEvent= new Event.With0Params<>(trimDelegate);
    
  • Type safe method creation

      Method m1 = Fun.toMethod(Thread::isAlive)  // Get final method
      Method m2 = Fun.toMethod(String::isEmpty); // Get method from final class
      Method m3 = Fun.toMethod(BufferedReader::readLine); // Get method that throws checked exception
      Method m4 = Fun.<String, Class[]>toMethod(getClass()::getDeclaredMethod); //to get vararg method you must specify parameters in generics
      Method m5 = Fun.<String>toMethod(Class::forName); // to get overloaded method you must specify parameters in generics
      Method m6 = Fun.toMethod(this::toString); //Works with inherited methods
    

Requirements

Requires Java 9 or above.
If you wish to use this project with Java 8 you must clone the project and 1) change the pom.xml's properties section such that source and target is set to 1.8 (instead of 1.9) and 2) delete the module-info.java file. After this you should be able to build using JDK-8.

Java 9 setup guide

This project is built with JDK9 and is modularized in that in contains a module-info.java file. The module's name is safety.mirror.
To make the library work, you must both add the safety.mirror module and allow it to perform reflection on your code.
That is:

  1. add the following line to your module-info.java file: requires safety.mirror;
  2. to allow the library to use reflection on your code you can do one of the following:
    1. Declare your module as open, fx open module my.project, thereby granting all modules reflective access to all of your project's packages.
    2. open one or more specific packages to reflection (i.e. granting all modules reflective access to that or those packages). This is done by adding a line a la opens com.my.example.package;. Off course, if you're choosing this approach, you should open those packages where you use the safety-mirror library.

Example #1:

open module my.test {
    requires safety.mirror;
}

Example #2:

module my.test {
    requires safety.mirror;
    opens com.test.main;
}

Details

Fun and friends: no more functional interfaces

With the Fun interface and its sub-interfaces you save yourself the hassle of creating functional interfaces for your fields and method signatures.
The functions return value and its parameters, if any, are defined via generic types.
That is:

  • With functional interfaces you would define the functional interface and use the functional interface as a type in your method signature or field.
  • With the Fun interfaces the type is already created and ready for use.

It's best explained with a few examples:

  1. Fun.With0Params<String> myFunctionField = " hello world "::trim;
  2. void equals(Fun.With2Params<Boolean, Object, Object> myEqualsFunction){myEqualsFunction.invoke(obj1, obj2)}
  3. Fun.With1ParamAndVoid<String> print = System.out::println; //to match lower case void return value you must use the *AndVoid subclass (since Void is NOT a boxed void)

The Fun interface has a number of sub-interfaces called With0Params, With1Param, With2Params, ..., With9Params. Further, if you need to match methods whose return type is lower case void you must use a speciel *AndVoid variant, i.e. With0ParamsAndVoid, With1ParamAndVoid etc.

Each of the With* classes are generic. You must specify A) the return type and B) the type of the parameters.
As seen by the examples above Fun.With2Params needs 3 generic types: The first one is the return type, the second and third ones are the method parameters.

Notice that currently Java Generics does not accept primitive types, but due to autoboxing you can match methods with primitive arguments by specifying their boxed counterpart. (This may change once Project Valhalla is completed)

Notice that Void is not a boxed void - for this reason you must use a speciel *Void variant of above sub-interfaces to match methods whose return type is void.

Delegates in Java!

The Delegate class's API is exposed as a number of static nested classes, one for each number of parameters. Their behavior mimic that of C#'s Multicast Delegates, in that you can add, remove and invoke.

Example:

    public static void main(String[] args){
       Delegate.With1Param<String, String> greetingsDelegate = new Delegate.With1Param<>(); //NB: Please remember the diamond operator on the right hand side. Without it this line won't compile.
       greetingsDelegate.add(str -> "Hello " + str);
       greetingsDelegate.add(str -> "Goodbye " + str);

       DelegateInvocationResult<String> invocationResult = greetingsDelegate.invokeAndAggregateExceptions("Sir");

       invocationResult.getFunctionInvocationResults().forEach(funInvRes -> System.out.println(funInvRes.getResult()));
       //prints: "Hello sir" and "Goodbye Sir"
    }

Key points:

  1. Choose the Delegate that matches the number of parameters in the method you target.
    • Use Delegate.With0Params if the method has no parameters (remember to specify the return type within the generics <...>).
    • Use Delegate.With1Param if the method has 1 parameter (and remember to specify the return type and parameter type within the generics <...>)
    • Use Delegate.With2Params if the method has 2 parameters (and remember ...)
    • etc (up until Delegate.With9Params)
  2. Use the special *Void types when you target methods, whose return type is lower case void (Upper case Void return type is rare).
    • Use Delegate.With0ParamsAndVoid if the method has no parameters and returns void.
    • Use Delegate.With1ParamAndVoid if the method has 1 parameter and returns void (and remember to specify the parameter type within the generics <...>)
    • Use Delegate.With2ParamsAndVoid if the method has 2 parameters (and remember ...)
    • etc (up until Delegate.With9ParamsAndVoid)
  3. Create your delegate with the new keyword.
  4. Invoke your delegate using one of the following invocation methods:
    • invoke(...): invokes all functions added to the delegate and throws any exception that might occur. That is, not all the delegate's functions are guaranteed to be invoked.
    • invokeAndAggregateExceptions: Similar to above but exceptions are aggregated. Use this invocation method if you want to make sure that all the functions are executed or if you don't want to handle any exceptions. But remember to inspect the result for any exceptions (boolean oneOrMoreExceptionsThrown = myDelegateInvocationResultInstance.isOneOrMoreExceptionsThrown()).
  5. As always with Java Generics you must remember to add the diamond <> operator to the right hand side in order for the compiler to be able to correctly infer the generic type.
  6. Be aware that the invoke method's parameters are all marked as @NotNull/@Nonnull and that this is enforced in the code: You will get a NullPointerException if one or more of your parameters are null. This is an API decision that may (or may not) change once Project Valhalla is completed - it depends on what that project exactly involves. The reason for this API decision is that the user might otherwise experience unexpected NPE's for some corner cases that involves autoboxing of primitive types. Take the following example, and assume that the class called MyClass contains a static void method that has one int parameter. Then the following will compile just fine due to autoboxing: Delegate.With1ParamAndVoid<Integer> del = new Delegate.With1ParamAndVoid(MyClass::myMethod)
    This can cause an unexpected NullPointerException (i.e. a runtime exception) if the creator of the delegate invokes it with null (since myMethod accepts an int, and null cannot be turned into an int). From the point of view of the Delegate this is perfectyl fine - it's generics specify Integer, which can be null. But when invoking the underlying method this would throw an NPE. To han

Functions added to a delegate can be removed again, but be aware that a reference to the function is needed.

Examples: This will work:

    Fun.With0Params<String> myFunction = "   hello world  "::trim;
    Delegate.With0Params<String> myDelegate = new Delegate.With0Params(myFunction);
    myDelegate.remove(myFunction);

This won't work:

    Delegate.With0Params<String> myDelegate = new Delegate.With0Params("   hello world  "::trim);
    myDelegate.remove("   hello world  "::trim);

Events

Delegates are often used together with Events, where an Event is just the public facing object that allows users to add functions to your event. Under the hood the Event simply adds the functions to the underlying delegate. The idea being, that the power of invoking the delegate (and removing functions) are not exposed to the public.

A typical use case is a GUI framework, where the GUI component classes define events, which the controllers can then subscribe to. For example, a subscriber may want to run an input validation function each time input is entered into a text box.

Example:

    //Create a private Delegate. Make sure it is private so only *you* can invoke it.
    private static Delegate.With0Params<String> trimDelegate = new Delegate.With0Params<>();

    //Create a public Event using the delegate you just created.
    public static Event.With0Params<String> trimEvent= new Event.With0Params<>(trimDelegate);

Type safe method creation

Simply provide a method reference to one of the overloaded toMethod methods in the Fun class. This will provide you with a java.lang.reflect.Method.

Method m1 = Fun.toMethod(Thread::isAlive)  // Get final method
Method m2 = Fun.toMethod(String::isEmpty); // Get method from final class
Method m3 = Fun.toMethod(BufferedReader::readLine); // Get method that throws checked exception
Method m4 = Fun.<String, Class[]>toMethod(getClass()::getDeclaredMethod); //to get vararg method you must specify parameters in generics
Method m5 = Fun.<String>toMethod(Class::forName); // to get overloaded method you must specify parameters in generics
Method m6 = Fun.toMethod(this::toString); //Works with inherited methods

Notice that you have to provide the method parameters in generics under certain circumstances (When the method is overloaded, or if the method has a varargs parameter).

Known limitations and workarounds

Nulls

Please be aware that all parameters of all the invoke methods (of both the Fun types and Delegate types) are annotated NonNull/@NotNull and that runtime null checks will make sure it is respected. - in other words: don't use nulls. Create Optionals for your signature if nulls oif you have the need. See details on why this is in below notes on primitives.

Varargs

  • The static overloaded Fun.toMethod methods cannot compile (out of the box) when the target method contains varargs. To solve this, one must help the compiler by explicit casting:
    Method m = Fun.toMethod((Fun.With1ParamAndVoid<String[]>)new FunToMethodTest()::methodThatTakesAVarargParam); //When varargs is involved you are unfortunately forced to cast to avoid an "Ambiguous method call" error.

Elaboration:
Take for example the following method:
public void foo(String... stringArray){...}

The following won't compile:
Method m = Fun.<String[]>toMethod(this::foo);

The reason is that the compiler can't find the correct overloaded method (Fun.With1ParamAndVoid<String[]>). This is the compiler error:
Ambiguous method call. Both toMethod(With0ParamsAndVoid<Object>) in Fun and toMethod(With1ParamAndVoid<Object>) in Fun match

Primitive types

Generics only allow Objects/Reference types, not primitive types. (This may change once Project Valhalla is completed.)
You can, however, pass any signature containing primitive params to a Fun type that has the corresponding boxed types.
Fx, if you defined the type Fun.With1Param<Integer>, then you can successfully assign a Method Reference to a method whose single param is primitive int.

In a way this is great - primitives are supported via autoboxing. But it also involves a pitfall. What if the method defining the Fun type invokes the given function using null? (Which is acceptable from the point of view of the type - it's generics specify an Integer parameter, and Integer may be null.) A NullPointerException will off course occur.
To tackle this the API have annotated all parameters of invocation methods (I.e. both the Fun types and the Delegate types) with various NonNull / NotNull annotations (Remember to activate your IDEs annotation processor and nullness checks).
Further, all invoke methods of the Delegate object has a null check and will throw a NullPointerException when passing one or more nulls.

Future work

I would like to add functions, events and delegates to the Kotlin programming language, i.e. add some syntactic sugar on top of this library to simplify usage.

Related projects

Versions

Version
2.0.3
2.0.2