* Changed database implementation. Removed static objects. * Fix Logs * Fix 40 errors from checkstyle plugin run. 139 left)) * Fix CacheStore errors from checkstyle plugin 107 left * Fix last errors in checkstyle. * Fix sonar issues * Fix issues in VALIDATE phase * Fix Bug with mongo connection. Used "Try with resources" * Add test * Added docker-compose for mongo db. MongoDb db work fixed. * Provided missing tests * Comments to start Application with mongo. * Fix some broken links * Remove extra space * Update filename * Fix some links in localization folders * Fix link * Update frontmatters * Work on patterns index page * Work on index page * Fixes according PR comments. Mainly Readme edits. * fix frontmatter * add missing png * Update pattern index.md * Add index.md for Chinese translation * update image paths * update circuit breaker image paths * Update image paths for localizations * add generated puml * Add missing image * Update img file extensions * Update the rest of the EN and ZH patterns to conform with the new website Co-authored-by: Victor Zalevskii <zvictormail@gmail.com>
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title, category, language, tags
| title | category | language | tags | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Null Object | Behavioral | en |
|
Intent
In most object-oriented languages, such as Java or C#, references may be null. These references need to be checked to ensure they are not null before invoking any methods, because methods typically cannot be invoked on null references. Instead of using a null reference to convey absence of an object (for instance, a non-existent customer), one uses an object which implements the expected interface, but whose method body is empty. The advantage of this approach over a working default implementation is that a Null Object is very predictable and has no side effects: it does nothing.
Explanation
Real world example
We are building a binary tree from nodes. There are ordinary nodes and "empty" nodes. Traversing the tree normally should not cause errors, so we use null object pattern where necessary.
In plain words
Null Object pattern handles "empty" objects gracefully.
Wikipedia says
In object-oriented computer programming, a null object is an object with no referenced value or with defined neutral ("null") behavior. The null object design pattern describes the uses of such objects and their behavior (or lack thereof).
Programmatic Example
Here's the definition of Node interface.
public interface Node {
String getName();
int getTreeSize();
Node getLeft();
Node getRight();
void walk();
}
We have two implementations of Node. The normal implementation NodeImpl and NullNode for
empty nodes.
@Slf4j
public class NodeImpl implements Node {
private final String name;
private final Node left;
private final Node right;
/**
* Constructor.
*/
public NodeImpl(String name, Node left, Node right) {
this.name = name;
this.left = left;
this.right = right;
}
@Override
public int getTreeSize() {
return 1 + left.getTreeSize() + right.getTreeSize();
}
@Override
public Node getLeft() {
return left;
}
@Override
public Node getRight() {
return right;
}
@Override
public String getName() {
return name;
}
@Override
public void walk() {
LOGGER.info(name);
if (left.getTreeSize() > 0) {
left.walk();
}
if (right.getTreeSize() > 0) {
right.walk();
}
}
}
public final class NullNode implements Node {
private static final NullNode instance = new NullNode();
private NullNode() {
}
public static NullNode getInstance() {
return instance;
}
@Override
public int getTreeSize() {
return 0;
}
@Override
public Node getLeft() {
return null;
}
@Override
public Node getRight() {
return null;
}
@Override
public String getName() {
return null;
}
@Override
public void walk() {
// Do nothing
}
}
Then we can construct and traverse the binary tree without errors as follows.
var root = new NodeImpl("1",
new NodeImpl("11",
new NodeImpl("111", NullNode.getInstance(), NullNode.getInstance()),
NullNode.getInstance()
),
new NodeImpl("12",
NullNode.getInstance(),
new NodeImpl("122", NullNode.getInstance(), NullNode.getInstance())
)
);
root.walk();
Program output:
1
11
111
12
122
Class diagram
Applicability
Use the Null Object pattern when
- You want to avoid explicit null checks and keep the algorithm elegant and easy to read.
