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Home/ Questions/Q 38325
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Asked: May 10, 20262026-05-10T14:41:25+00:00 2026-05-10T14:41:25+00:00

First of all, I know how to build a Java application. But I have

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First of all, I know how to build a Java application. But I have always been puzzled about where to put my classes. There are proponents for organizing the packages in a strictly domain oriented fashion, others separate by tier.

I myself have always had problems with

  • naming,
  • placing

So,

  1. Where do you put your domain specific constants (and what is the best name for such a class)?
  2. Where do you put classes for stuff which is both infrastructural and domain specific (for instance I have a FileStorageStrategy class, which stores the files either in the database, or alternatively in database)?
  3. Where to put Exceptions?
  4. Are there any standards to which I can refer?
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  1. 2026-05-10T14:41:26+00:00Added an answer on May 10, 2026 at 2:41 pm

    I’ve really come to like Maven’s Standard Directory Layout.

    One of the key ideas for me is to have two source roots – one for production code and one for test code like so:

    MyProject/src/main/java/com/acme/Widget.java MyProject/src/test/java/com/acme/WidgetTest.java 

    (here, both src/main/java and src/test/java are source roots).

    Advantages:

    • Your tests have package (or ‘default’) level access to your classes under test.
    • You can easily package only your production sources into a JAR by dropping src/test/java as a source root.

    One rule of thumb about class placement and packages:

    Generally speaking, well structured projects will be free of circular dependencies. Learn when they are bad (and when they are not), and consider a tool like JDepend or SonarJ that will help you eliminate them.

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