paint-brush
Code Smell 255 - Addressing Parallel Hierarchies in Codeby@mcsee
211 reads

Code Smell 255 - Addressing Parallel Hierarchies in Code

by Maximiliano ContieriJune 21st, 2024
Read on Terminal Reader
Read this story w/o Javascript
tldt arrow

Too Long; Didn't Read

Parallel hierarchies occur when you must make a counterpart every time you create a domain class. The counterpart might be persistence, UI, Controller, tests, etc. This leads to duplicate structures and tight coupling. You can use composition to simplify the design and improve the system's robustness.
featured image - Code Smell 255 - Addressing Parallel Hierarchies in Code
Maximiliano Contieri HackerNoon profile picture

Double Trouble: The Curse of Redundant Structures

TL;DR: Parallel hierarchies lead to duplication and tight coupling.

Problems

  • Increased complexity
  • DRY / Code Duplication
  • Maintenance Nightmare
  • Coupling
  • Ripple Effect
  • Potential for inconsistencies across different hierarchies

Solutions

  1. Merge hierarchies
  2. Use composition
  3. Extract Common Functionality

Refactorings

Context

Parallel hierarchies occur when you must make a counterpart every time you create a domain class.

The counterpart might be persistence, UI, Controller, tests, Serialization, etc.

This leads to duplicate structures and tight coupling.

Changes in the domain model require changes in the parallel classes, making the system more brittle and harder to manage.

Sample Code

Wrong

// Domain classes
abstract class Transaction {
    private String id;
    private double amount;
}

class BankTransaction extends Transaction {
    private String bankName;
}

class CreditCardTransaction extends Transaction {
    private String cardNumber;
}

// Persistence classes
abstract class TransactionDAO {
    private String id;
    private double amount;
}

class BankTransactionDAO extends TransactionDAO {
    private String bankName;
}

class CreditCardTransactionDAO extends TransactionDAO {
    private String cardNumber;
}

Right

public class TransactionService {
    private EntityManager entityManager;

    public TransactionService(EntityManager entityManager) {
        this.entityManager = entityManager;
    }

    public void saveTransaction(Transaction transaction) {
        entityManager.getTransaction().begin();
        entityManager.persist(transaction);
        entityManager.getTransaction().commit();
    }

    public Transaction loadTransaction(
        Long id, Class<? extends Transaction> transactionClass) {
        return entityManager.find(transactionClass, id);
    }
}

Detection

  • [x]Semi-Automatic

You can detect this smell by traversing the hierarchies

Exceptions

  • Some frameworks force you to extend your domain using this technique

Tags

  • Hierarchies

Level

  • [x]Intermediate

AI Generation

AI generators often create this smell by mirroring domain models in persistence layers without understanding the implications, leading to unnecessary duplication.

AI Detection

AI Assistants can fix this smell with instructions to consolidate hierarchies and use composition, reducing duplication and improving maintainability.

ChatGPT offered a solution using 'Instanceof' which is an even worse code smell

Conclusion

Parallel hierarchies create unnecessary complexity and make the codebase harder to maintain.

They bring deep hierarchies, which is a symptom of subclassification for code reuse

You can merge the hierarchies and use composition to simplify the design and improve the system's robustness.

You can use Metaprogramming to manage the persistence or the unit tests.

Metaprogramming is also a code smell when you use it for domain problems, but persistence and testing are orthogonal domains.

Relations

Code Smell 137 - Inheritance Tree Too Deep

Code Smell 11 - Subclassification for Code Reuse

Code Smell 58 - Yo-yo Problem

More Info

Disclaimer

Code Smells are my opinion.


Inheritance is surely a good answer but who knows the questions?

Michel Gauthier

Software Engineering Great Quotes


This article is part of the CodeSmell Series.

How to Find the Stinky Parts of your Code