We are having this discussion in our team about code conventions for Java for:
interface
:Foo
orIFoo
orFooInterface
?abstract
:Foo
orAbstractFoo
?Enums
:Foo
orFooEnum
?
I'm basically trying to put my personal preferences aside :) so reasons to back up one or other convention are very welcome.
9 Answers 9
In Java: Foo
, AbstractFoo
and Foo
- although AbstractFoo
could just be Foo
.
Evidence:
java.util.List
(interface)java.util.AbstractList
(abstract class)java.util.Formatter.BigDecimalLayoutForm
(enum)
For the interface part, see the Naming Conventions section of the Java Coding Conventions document. It doesn't talk about enums and abstract classes though.
4 Comments
able
. So if Foo
were an action the interface should be named Fooable
.CharSequence
, all the collections, the various DOM interfaces.Fooable
, naming because it just helps me differentiate from normal classes at a glance.From my blog:
- Foo - The interface ultimately defines the concept, so it should have the best name.
- AbstractFoo - An abstract implementation intended to be used as the base of a hierarchy of classes.
- BaseFoo - An implementation intended to be used as the base of a hierarchy of classes, where the base class could be used on its own if necessary.
- DefaultFoo - A "default" implementation that would be appropriate for the majority of typical use cases.
- SimpleFoo - A "simple" implementation with no unexpected functionality, perhaps as an example or as a mock. A simple POJO would be a good "simple" implementation.
- {Descriptive}Foo - Other implementations should describe what makes them unique.
The blog also discusses reasons against some of the other names.
Comments
interfaces: Foo
Reason: Your code must not need to know that they are dealing with an interface. Writing 'IFoo' does just that. Instead, Foo makes it clear that 'Foo' is generic, and the object behind it may be a 'NumFoo' or a 'StrFoo'. The code really need not care.
abstract classes: AbstractFoo
Reason: your code is never going to use this class directly. You will always subclass this class to make any classes that are used by other code. So it must be amply clear to a programmer that the class is an abstract one. And what better way to name it Abstract! Places where you need to use references of type AbstractFoo, you should reconsider using an interface instead. (Ofcourse, this is not possible in C++)
Enums: FooType or FooEnum. Personally, FooType is better because Type relates more easily to the "real world" that Enum does.
Cheers!
Comments
No special conventions.
Having special naming conventions for these kinds of classes is basically a form of Hungarian notation (the bad kind): the information it gives you is already present in the syntax and is usually made easily available by IDEs e.g. when you hover over the name. Putting it into the name itself is pointless and ugly.
Class names should simply describe the class's role as well as possible. This can lead to "natural" naming conventions - a very good example is the Java convention of naming interfaces with an -able suffix (Iterable, Comparable) - but I don't want to imagine the result if it were universally enforced and List, Map, etc. had to follow it.
3 Comments
My convention:
- interface: Foo
- abstract: it depends FooAdaptor or AbstractFoo or BaseFoo
- enum: Foo or Foos
I really dislike using I in interface names or even FooInterface:
interface FooInterface {
is like writing:
class FooClass {
or even:
abstract class AbstractFooClass {
it is simply prolix.
My convention:
- Interface:
Foo
; - Abstract:
AbstractFoo
; - Enum: usually
Foo
but in some circumstancesFooType
.
IFoo
is very .Net, not Java. FooInterface
I've never seen used.
3 Comments
Regarding the interfaces I personaly like:
Fooable
1 Comment
About interfaces:
I prefer IFoo because it’s a talking name, telling you it is an inferface right away. Second, for modules etc. where you do an interface for just one class, the class often has the same name as the interface. Then you can use Foo extends IFoo. Otherwise, well, you’d have to find a name. Or use FooInterface or whatever ...
java.util.list as stated uses Foo. This is no problem as classes with different concepts implement it, thus already suggesting a different name (ArrayList, LinkedList ...). I’m not quite sure if I really would prefer IList there. Dunno ... :P
1 Comment
Here's convetion used in my DEV team in ION.
Interface
interface IMyInterface
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
abstract class MyAbstract
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
enum EMyEnumeration
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::