DEV Community

Cover image for Code Smell 28 - Setters
Maxi Contieri
Maxi Contieri

Posted on • Originally published at maximilianocontieri.com

Code Smell 28 - Setters

The first exercise junior programmers do. IDEs, tutorial and senior developers keep teaching them this anti-pattern.

Problems

  • Mutability

  • Information Hiding

  • Anemic Models

  • Fail Fast

  • Integrity

  • Duplicated Code

Solutions

  1. Avoid Setters

  2. Set essential attributes on private initialization.

Sample Code

Wrong

Mutation brings lots of problems

Information Hiding Violated

Right

Detection

First step will be to forbid public attributes (if language allows them).

Secondly, we will search for methods setXXXX(), analyzing method structure (should be an assignment to attribute xxxx).

We should not forbid methods setting accidental state since this is valid. They should not be named setters since they ask the object to change, but they don't set anything.

Examples

  • DTOs

Exceptions

Setting attributes is safe for non-essential attributes.

But it has all drawbacks and considerations already mentioned.

Tags

  • Mutation

  • Information Hiding

Conclusion

Creating incomplete and anemic objects is a very bad practice violating
mutability, fail fast principle and real world bijections.

Relations

More Info

Fail Fast

Here is the full discussion on Setters

Credits

Photo by Victor Rodriguez on Unsplash


Object-oriented programming languages support encapsulation, thereby improving the ability of software to be reused, refined, tested, maintained, and extended. The full benefit of this support can only be realized if encapsulation is maximized during the design process.

Rebecca Wirfs-Brock

Latest comments (0)