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LearningOutcomes.adoc

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Learning Outcomes

Utilize User Stories [LO-UserStories]

Exercise: Add more user stories

  • Assume you are planing to expand the functionality of the AddressBook (but keep it as a CLI application). What other user stories do you think AddressBook should support? Add those user stories to the DeveloperGuide.adoc.

Utilize use cases [LO-UseCases]

Exercise: Add a 'Rename tag' use case

  • Add a use case to the DeveloperGuide.adoc to cover the case of renaming of an existing tag. e.g. rename the tag friends to buddies (i.e. all persons who had the friends tag will now have a buddies tag instead) Assume that AddressBook confirms the change with the user before carrying out the operation.

Use Non Functional Requirements [LO-NFR]

Exercise: Add more NFRs

  • Add some more NFRs to the DeveloperGuide.adoc

Use Polymorphism [LO-Polymorphism]

Note how the Command::execute() method shows polymorphic behavior.

Exercise: Add a polymorphic isMutating method

  • Add a method boolean isMutating() to the Command class. This method will return true for command types that mutate the data. e.g. AddCommand

  • Currently, AddressBook data are saved to the file after every command. Take advantage of the the new method you added to limit file saving to only for command types that mutate data. i.e. add command should always save the data while list command should never save data to the file.

ℹ️

There may be better ways to limit file saving to commands that mutate data. The above approach, while not optimal, will give you chance to implement a polymorphic behavior.

Use abstract classes/methods [LO-Abstract]

Exercise: Make Command#execute() method abstract

  • Make the Command#execute() method abstract (hint: refer to the comment given below the method)

Use interfaces [LO-Interfaces]

Note how the AddressBook class implements the ReadOnlyAddressBook interface so that clients who don’t need write access to the AddressBook can access the AddressBook through the ReadOnlyAddressBook interface instead.

ReadOnlyAddressBookUsage

Exercise: Add a Printable interface

  • Add a Printable interface as follows.

    PrintableInterface
  • Override the getPrintableString in classes Name, Phone, Email, and Address so that each produces a printable string representation of the object. e.g. Name: John Smith, Phone: 12349862

  • Add the following method in a suitable place of some other class. Note how the method depends on the Interface.

    /**
     * Returns a concatenated version of the printable strings of each object.
     */
    String getPrintableString(Printable... printables) {

    The above method can be used to get a printable string representing a bunch of person details. For example, you should be able to call that method like this:

    // p is a Person object
    return getPrintableString(p.getPhone(), p.getEmail(), p.getAddress());

Follow Liskov Substitution Principle [LO-LSP]

Exercise: Add an exception to an overridden method

  • Add a throws Exception clause to the AddCommand::execute method. Notice how Java compiler will not allow it, unless you add the same throws clause to the parent class method. This is because if a child class throws an exception that is not specified by the Parent’s contract, the child class is no longer substitutable in place of the parent class.

  • Also note that while in the above example the compiler enforces LSP, there are other situations where it is up to the programmer to enforce it. For example, if the method in the parent class works for null input, the overridden method in the child class should not reject null inputs. This will not be enforced by the compiler.

Use Java-FX for GUI programming [LO-JavaFx]

Exercise: Enhance GUI

  • Do some enhancements to the AddressBook GUI. e.g. add an application icon, change font size/style

Analyze Coupling and Cohesion of designs [LO-CouplingCohesion]

  • Notice how having a separate ParserUtil class to handle user input validation, space trimming etc. of model data (an application of the Single Responsibility Principle) improves the cohesion of the model component (since it does not need to be concerned with handling user input) as well as the ParserUtil class.

Exercise: Identify places to reduce coupling and increase cohesion

  • Where else in the design coupling can be reduced further, or cohesion can be increased further?

Apply Dependency Inversion Principle [LO-DIP]

  • Note how the LogicManager class doesn’t depend on StorageManager directly, but rather the interface Storage. This is an application of the Dependency Inversion Principle.

    LogicStorageDIP
  • Where else in the code do you notice the application of DIP?

Use Dependency Injection [LO-DI]

Notice how the LogicManager class does not depend on the StorageManager class, but depends on the Storage interface. This allows us to use Dependency Injection to test the LogicManager class without getting the StorageManager class involved.

Exercise: Facilitate injecting a StorageStub

  • Notice how LogicManagerTest tests LogicManager by constructing a StorageManager object.

  • Implement StorageStub such that calls to its save* methods do nothing (i.e. empty method body).

  • Update LogicManagerTest to work with the StorageStub instead of the actual StorageManager object. i.e. LogicManagerTest injects a StorageStub object when constructing a LogicManager before testing it.

    DependencyInjection
  • The example above uses DIP as a means to achieve DI. Note that there is another way to inject a StorageStub object, as shown below. In this case we do not apply the DIP but we still achieve DI.

    DependencyInjectionWithoutDIP

Apply Open-Closed Principle [LO-OCP]

Exercise: Analyze OCP-compliance of the LogicManager class

  • Consider adding a new command to the Address Book. e.g. an edit command. Notice how little you need to change in the LogicManager class to extend its behavior so that it can execute the new command. That is because LogicManager follows the OCP i.e. LogicManager is open to be extended with more commands but closed for modifications.

  • Is it possible to make the AddressBookParser class more OCP-compliant in terms of extending it to handle more command types?

  • In terms of how it saves data, is LogicManager more OCP-compliant due to the application of DIP as given in LO-DIP? How can you improve LogicManager's OCP-compliance further so that it can not only work with different types of storages, but different number of storages (e.g. save to both a text file and a database).

Work in a 3KLoC code base [LO-3KLoC]

Exercise: Enhance AddressBook

  • Enhance AddressBook in some way. e.g. add a new command