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Encapsulation

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Manage episode 236757437 series 1900125
Content provided by iteration podcast, John Jacob, and JP Sio - Web Developers. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by iteration podcast, John Jacob, and JP Sio - Web Developers or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ppacc.player.fm/legal.

Episode 6 - More Code Examples

  • Drawing from Chapter 7 - Encapsulation

A weekly podcast about programming, development, and design through the lens of amazing books, chapter-by-chapter.

Encapsulate Record (162)

var organization = { name: "JP Sio", country: "USA" }; 

becomes ⬇️

class Organization { constructor(data) { this._name = data.name; this._country = data.country; } get name() { return this._name; } set name(arg) { this._name = arg; } get country() { return this._country; } set country(arg) { this._country = arg; } } 
  • you can hide what is stored and provide methods
  • consumer of class Organization doesn't need to know / care which is stored and which is calculated
  • nice getter and setter methods
  • makes it easier to refactor -> can hide implementation of internals and update the internals while keeping the same external interface

Encapsulate Collection (170)

class Person { get courses() { return this._courses; } set courses(aList) { this._courses = aList; } } 

becomes ⬇️

class Person { get courses() { return this._courses.slice(); } addCourse(aCourse) { /*...*/ } } 

Replace Primative with Object (174)

orders.filter(0 => "high" === o.priority || "rush" === o.priority) 

becomes ⬇️

orders.filter(o => o.priority.higherThan(new Priority("normal"))); 
  • this goes back to "Primitive Obsession"
  • programmers are often hesitant to create their own types and rely only on primitives. i.e. representing a phone number as a string instead of as it's own type

A telephone number may be represented as a string for a while, but later it will need special behavior for formatting, extracting the area code, and the like

  • create a new class for that bit of data
  • at first, the class does very little. in fact it probably only wraps a primitive
  • but now you have a place to put behavior specific to its needs

Inline Function (115) 🥴

Sometimes it's better to not try to split things apart, sometimes it just complicates things.

// before refactor: function getItemPrice(item) { if (itemOnSale(item) == true) { return item.price - 5 } else { return item.price } }; function itemOnSale(product) { if (product.onSale == true) { return true; } else { return false; } }; let original = getItemPrice(sweatshirt); // after refactor: function newGetItemPrice(item) { if (item.onSale == true) { return item.price - 5 } else { return item.price } }; 

Extract Class (182) 🥴

  • Talk through HUGE applicant model (in Ruby)
  • Broke this into child objects
    • Applicant Health History
    • Applicant Habits
    • Applicant Lifestyle
    • Applicant Method
    • Applicant Legal Release

Picks

  • JP: None :(
  • John: Quad Lock phone mount - bikes
  continue reading

78 episodes

Artwork

Encapsulation

iteration

113 subscribers

published

iconShare
 
Manage episode 236757437 series 1900125
Content provided by iteration podcast, John Jacob, and JP Sio - Web Developers. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by iteration podcast, John Jacob, and JP Sio - Web Developers or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ppacc.player.fm/legal.

Episode 6 - More Code Examples

  • Drawing from Chapter 7 - Encapsulation

A weekly podcast about programming, development, and design through the lens of amazing books, chapter-by-chapter.

Encapsulate Record (162)

var organization = { name: "JP Sio", country: "USA" }; 

becomes ⬇️

class Organization { constructor(data) { this._name = data.name; this._country = data.country; } get name() { return this._name; } set name(arg) { this._name = arg; } get country() { return this._country; } set country(arg) { this._country = arg; } } 
  • you can hide what is stored and provide methods
  • consumer of class Organization doesn't need to know / care which is stored and which is calculated
  • nice getter and setter methods
  • makes it easier to refactor -> can hide implementation of internals and update the internals while keeping the same external interface

Encapsulate Collection (170)

class Person { get courses() { return this._courses; } set courses(aList) { this._courses = aList; } } 

becomes ⬇️

class Person { get courses() { return this._courses.slice(); } addCourse(aCourse) { /*...*/ } } 

Replace Primative with Object (174)

orders.filter(0 => "high" === o.priority || "rush" === o.priority) 

becomes ⬇️

orders.filter(o => o.priority.higherThan(new Priority("normal"))); 
  • this goes back to "Primitive Obsession"
  • programmers are often hesitant to create their own types and rely only on primitives. i.e. representing a phone number as a string instead of as it's own type

A telephone number may be represented as a string for a while, but later it will need special behavior for formatting, extracting the area code, and the like

  • create a new class for that bit of data
  • at first, the class does very little. in fact it probably only wraps a primitive
  • but now you have a place to put behavior specific to its needs

Inline Function (115) 🥴

Sometimes it's better to not try to split things apart, sometimes it just complicates things.

// before refactor: function getItemPrice(item) { if (itemOnSale(item) == true) { return item.price - 5 } else { return item.price } }; function itemOnSale(product) { if (product.onSale == true) { return true; } else { return false; } }; let original = getItemPrice(sweatshirt); // after refactor: function newGetItemPrice(item) { if (item.onSale == true) { return item.price - 5 } else { return item.price } }; 

Extract Class (182) 🥴

  • Talk through HUGE applicant model (in Ruby)
  • Broke this into child objects
    • Applicant Health History
    • Applicant Habits
    • Applicant Lifestyle
    • Applicant Method
    • Applicant Legal Release

Picks

  • JP: None :(
  • John: Quad Lock phone mount - bikes
  continue reading

78 episodes

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