I’m trying to make an app I’m designing more generic and implement the command pattern into it to use manager classes to invoke methods exposed by interfaces.
I have several classes with the GetItem() and GetList() methods in them, some are overloaded. They accept different parameters as I was trying to use dependency injection, and they return different types. Here are a couple of examples:
class DatastoreHelper
{
public Datastore GetItem(string DatastoreName)
{
// return new Datastore(); from somewhere
}
public Datastore GetItem(int DatastoreID)
{
// return new Datastore(); from somewhere
}
public List<Datastore> GetList()
{
// return List<Datastore>(); from somewhere
}
public List<Datastore> GetList(HostSystem myHostSystem)
{
// return List<Datastore>(); from somewhere
}
}
class HostSystemHelper
{
public HostSystem GetItem(int HostSystemID)
{
// return new HostSystem(); from somewhere
}
public List<HostSystem> GetList(string ClusterName)
{
//return new List<HostSystem>(); from somewhere
}
}
I’m trying to figure out if I could use a generic interface for these two methods, and a manager class which would effectively be the controller. Doing this would increase the reuse ability of my manager class.
interface IGetObjects
{
public object GetItem();
public object GetList();
}
class GetObjectsManager
{
private IGetObjects mGetObject;
public GetObjectsManager(IGetObjects GetObject)
{
this.mGetObject = GetObject;
}
public object GetItem()
{
return this.mGetObject.GetItem();
}
public object GetList()
{
return this.GetList();
}
}
I know I’d have to ditch passing in the parameters to the methods themselves and use class properties instead, but I’d lose the dependency injection. I know I’d have to cast the return objects at the calling code into what they’re supposed to be. So my helper classes would then look like this:
class DatastoreHelper
{
public string DatastoreName { get; set; }
public string DatastoreID { get; set; }
public object GetItem()
{
// return new Datastore(); from somewhere
}
public List<object> GetList()
{
// return List<Datastore>(); from somewhere
}
}
class HostSystemHelper
{
public int HostSystemID { get; set; }
public string ClusterName {get; set;}
public object GetItem()
{
// return new HostSystem(); from somewhere
}
public List<object> GetList()
{
//return new List<HostSystem>(); from somewhere
}
}
But is the above a good idea or am I trying to fit a pattern in somewhere it doesn’t belong?
EDIT: I’ve added some more overloaded methods to illustrate that my classes are complex and contain many methods, some overloaded many times according to different input params.
The first code samples look quite similar to the Repository Pattern. I think this is what are you trying to apply. The last sample is not good and Jon told you why. However, instead of reinventing the wheel, read a bit about the Repository (lots of questions about it on SO) because, if I understood correctly, this is what you really want.
About reuse, not many things and especially persistence interface are reusable. There is the Generic Repository Pattern (I consider it an anti-pattern) which tries to accomplish that but really, do all the application needs the same persistence interface?
As a general guideline, when you design an object, design it to fullfil the specific application needs, if it happens to be reused that’s a bonus, but that’s not a primary purpose of an object.