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Home/ Questions/Q 86185
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 10, 20262026-05-10T22:12:23+00:00 2026-05-10T22:12:23+00:00

I have a deceptively simple scenario, and I want a simple solution, but it’s

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I have a deceptively simple scenario, and I want a simple solution, but it’s not obvious which is ‘most correct’ or ‘most Java’.

Let’s say I have a small authenticate(Client client) method in some class. The authentication could fail for a number of reasons, and I want to return a simple boolean for control flow, but also return a String message for the user. These are the possibilities I can think of:

  • Return a boolean, and pass in a StringBuilder to collect the message. This is the closest to a C-style way of doing it.
  • Throw an exception instead of returning false, and include the message. I don’t like this since failure is not exceptional.
  • Create a new class called AuthenticationStatus with the boolean and the String. This seems like overkill for one small method.
  • Store the message in a member variable. This would introduce a potential race condition, and I don’t like that it implies some state that isn’t really there.

Any other suggestions?

Edit Missed this option off

  • Return null for success – Is this unsafe?

Edit Solution:

I went for the most OO solution and created a small AuthenticationResult class. I wouldn’t do this in any other language, but I like it in Java. I also liked the suggestion of returning an String[] since it’s like the null return but safer. One advantage of the Result class is that you can have a success message with further details if required.

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  1. 2026-05-10T22:12:24+00:00Added an answer on May 10, 2026 at 10:12 pm

    Returning a small object with both the boolean flag and the String inside is probably the most OO-like way of doing it, although I agree that it seems overkill for a simple case like this.

    Another alternative is to always return a String, and have null (or an empty String – you choose which) indicate success. As long as the return values are clearly explained in the javadocs there shouldn’t be any confusion.

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