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OSIDs strictly define the permissible checked an unchecked exceptions which may pass. They are straightforward in the most basic of method implementations. However, some semantic analysis is necessary when creating a chain of methods to help convey what may have gone wrong to your consumer or ultimately your end user.

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When acting as an OSID Consumer within an OSID Provider, look at the defined exceptions and to what they pertain in order to determine what to catch. Muddling through by adding try/catch blocks only when the compiler complains misses these semantics.

Method Factoring

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Kicking The Can

Here’s an example of an attempt to replace a GradeSystem for a Course using the kick-the-can method:

Code Block
public class CourseLookupSession
    implements org.osid.course.CourseLookupSession {
    
    private org.osid.course.CourseLookupSession courseLookupSession;
    private org.osid.grading.GradeSystemLookupSession gradeSystemLookupSession;
    private org.osid.relationship.RelationshipLookupSession relationshipLookupSession;
    
    @OSID
    public org.osid.course.CourseList getCourses()
        throws org.osid.OperationFailedException,
               org.osid.PermissionDeniedException {
              
        return (processCourses(this.courseLookupSession.getCourses()));
    }
    
    private org.osid.course.CourseList processCourses(org.osid.course.CourseList courses) 
        throws org.osid.OperationFailedException,
               org.osid.PermissionDeniedException {
              
        MutableCourseList ret = new MutableCourseList();
        while (courses.hasNext()) {
            ret.add(processCourse(courses.getNextCourse())); 
        }
        ret.done();
        return (ret);
    }
    
    private org.osid.course.Course processCourse(org.osid.course.Course course) 
        throws org.osid.OperationFailedException,
               org.osid.PermissionDeniedException {
               
        if (course.isGraded()) {
            return (processGradingOptions(course));
        } else {
            return (course);
        }
    }
    
    private org.osid.course.Course processGradingOptions(org.osid.course.Courss course) 
        throws org.osid.OperationFailedException,
               org.osid.PermissionDeniedException {
               
        Collection<org.osid.grading.GradeSystem> mappedGradeSystems = new ArrayList<>();
        try (org.osid.grading.GradeSystemList gradeSystems = course.getGradingOptions()) {
            while (ids.hasNext()) {
                org.osid.grading.GradeSystem gradeSystem = gradeSystems.getNextGradeSystem();
                try {
                    mappedGradeSystems.add(getNewGradingOption(gradeSystem.getId()));
                } catch (org.osid.NotFoundException nfe) {
                    mappedGradeSystems.add(gradeSystem);
               }
            }                        
        }
        return (mapCourseToNewGradeSystems(course, mappedGradeSystems);
    }
    
    private org.osid.grading.GradeSystem getNewGradingOption(org.osid.id.Id gradeSystemid)
        throws org.osid.NotFoundException,
               org.osid.OperationFailedException,
               org.osid.PermissionDeniedException {
              
        try (org.osid.relationship.RelationshipList mappings = this.relationLookupSession.getRelationshipsForSource(gradeSystemId)) {
            if (mappings.hasNext()) {
                return (this.gradeSystemLookupSession.getGradeSystem(mappings.getNextRelationship().getDestinationId()));
            } else {
                throw new org.osid.NotFoundException("cannot map " + gradeSystemId);
            }
        }
    }
    
    private org.osid.course.Course mapCourseToNewGradeSystems(course, mappedGradeSystems)
        throws org.osid.OperationFailedException,
               org.osid.PermissionDeniedException {
  
        return (new CourseWrapper(course, mappedGradeSystems));
    }

The above code pushes the logic of each loop into a separate method. The resulting flow describes a procedure. Some of the symptoms include:

  • a trail of private methods strung together

  • method names with the word process in them

  • lack of clarity over which method is responsible for what job

  • the inability to reuse any part of the trail other than the head

  • one utility for the list and another for an individual element on the list

  • needing to declare the same exceptions at each point and the resulting exceptions actually thrown could come from anywhere along the trail.

This factoring approach worked fine in C & Fortran.

See Also

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