Book Image

Practical Design Patterns for Java Developers

By : Miroslav Wengner
Book Image

Practical Design Patterns for Java Developers

By: Miroslav Wengner

Overview of this book

Design patterns are proven solutions to standard problems in software design and development, allowing you to create reusable, flexible, and maintainable code. This book enables you to upskill by understanding popular patterns to evolve into a proficient software developer. You’ll start by exploring the Java platform to understand and implement design patterns. Then, using various examples, you’ll create different types of vehicles or their parts to enable clarity in design pattern thinking, along with developing new vehicle instances using dedicated design patterns to make the process consistent. As you progress, you’ll find out how to extend vehicle functionalities and keep the code base structure and behavior clean and shiny. Concurrency plays an important role in application design, and you'll learn how to employ a such design patterns with the visualization of thread interaction. The concluding chapters will help you identify and understand anti-pattern utilization in the early stages of development to address refactoring smoothly. The book covers the use of Java 17+ features such as pattern matching, switch cases, and instances of enhancements to enable productivity. By the end of this book, you’ll have gained practical knowledge of design patterns in Java and be able to apply them to address common design problems.
Table of Contents (14 chapters)
1
Part 1: Design Patterns and Java Platform Functionalities
4
Part 2: Implementing Standard Design Patterns Using Java Programming
8
Part 3: Other Essential Patterns and Anti-Patterns

Handling requests with the front-controller pattern

The goal of the pattern is to create a common service for most of the client requirements. The pattern defines a procedure that allows common functions such as authentication, security, custom manipulation, and logging to be encapsulated at a single location.

Motivation

This pattern is commonly seen within web applications. It implements and defines the standard handler used by the controller. It is the handler’s responsibility to evaluate the validity of all incoming requests, although the handler itself may be available in many incarnations at runtime. The code is encapsulated in one place and referenced by the clients.

Finding it in the JDK

Usage of the front-controller pattern can be found in the jdk.httpserver module, the sun.net.httpserver package, and the HttpServer abstract class. The class implements the createContext abstract method, which accepts the HttpHander interface. Handler instances participate...