[records] Ancillary fields (was: Records -- current status)

Kevin Bourrillion kevinb at google.com
Fri Apr 13 17:15:47 UTC 2018


As one of the voices demanding we allow ancillary fields, I can confirm
that I had only these derived-state use cases in mind. I don't see anything
else as legitimate. That is, I think that the semantic invariants you're
trying to preserve for records are worth fighting for, and additional
*non-derived* state would violate them.

On Fri, Apr 13, 2018 at 9:46 AM, Brian Goetz <brian.goetz at oracle.com> wrote:

> Let's see if we can make some progress on the elephant in the room --
> ancillary fields.  Several have expressed the concern that without the
> ability to declare some additional instance state, the feature will be too
> limited.
>
> The argument in favor of additional fields is the obvious one; more
> classes can be records.  And there are some arguably valid use cases for
> additional fields that don't conflict with the design center for records.
> The best example is derived state:
>
>  - When a field is a cached property derived from the record state (such
> as how String caches its hashCode)
>
> Arguably, if a field is derived deterministically from immutable record
> state, then it is not creating any new record state.  This surely seems
> within the circle.
>
> The argument against is more of a slippery-slope one; I believe developers
> would like to view this feature through the lens of syntactic boilerplate,
> rather than through semantics.  If we let them, they would surely and
> routinely do the following:
>
>     record A(int a, int b) {
>         private int c;
>
>         public A(int a, int b, int c) {
>             this(a, b);
>             this.c = c;
>         }
>
>         public boolean equals(Object other) {
>             return default.equals(other) && ((A) other).c == c;
>         }
>     }
>
> Here, `c` is surely part of the state of `A`.  And, they wouldn't even
> know what they'd lost; they would just assume records are a way of
> "kickstarting" a class declaration with some public fields, and then you
> can mix in whatever private state you want.
>
> Why is this bad?  While "reduced-boilerplate classes" is a valid feature
> idea, our design goal for records is much more than that. The semantic
> constraints on records are valuable because they yield useful invariants;
> that they are "just" their state vector, that they can be freely taken
> apart and put back together with no loss of information, and hence can be
> freely serialized/marshaled to JSON and back, etc.
>
> We currently prohibit records like `A` via a number of restrictions: no
> additional fields, no override of equals.  We don't need all of these
> restrictions to achieve the desired goal, but we also can't relax them all
> without opening the gate.  So we should decide carefully which we want to
> relax, as making the wrong choice constrains us in the future.
>
> Before I dive into details of how we might extend records to support the
> case of "cached derived state", I'd like to first come to some agreement
> that this covers the use cases that we think fall into the "legitimate"
> uses of additional fields.
>
>
>
> On 3/16/2018 2:55 PM, Brian Goetz wrote:
>
>> There are a number of potentially open details on the design for
>> records.  My inclination is to start with the simplest thing that preserves
>> the flexibility and expectations we want, and consider opening up later as
>> necessary.
>>
>> One of the biggest issues, which Kevin raised as a must-address issue, is
>> having sufficient support for precondition validation. Without foreclosing
>> on the ability to do more later with declarative guards, I think the recent
>> construction proposal meets the requirement for lightweight enforcement
>> with minimal or no duplication.  I'm hopeful that this bit is "there".
>>
>> Our goal all along has been to define records as being “just macros” for
>> a finer-grained set of features.  Some of these are motivated by
>> boilerplate; some are motivated by semantics (coupling semantics of API
>> elements to state.)  In general, records will get there first, and then
>> ordinary classes will get the more general feature, but the default answer
>> for "can you relax records, so I can use it in this case that almost but
>> doesn't quite fit" should be "no, but there will probably be a feature
>> coming that makes that class simpler, wait for that."
>>
>>
>> Some other open issues (please see my writeup at
>> http://cr.openjdk.java.net/~briangoetz/amber/datum.html for reference),
>> and my current thoughts on these, are outlined below. Comments welcome!
>>
>>  - Extension.  The proposal outlines a notion of abstract record, which
>> provides a "width subtyped" hierarchy.  Some have questioned whether this
>> carries its weight, especially given how Scala doesn't support case-to-case
>> extension (some see this as a bug, others as an existence proof.)  Records
>> can implement interfaces.
>>
>>  - Concrete records are final.  Relaxing this adds complexity to the
>> equality story; I'm not seeing good reasons to do so.
>>
>>  - Additional constructors.  I don't see any reason why additional
>> constructors are problematic, especially if they are constrained to
>> delegate to the default constructor (which in turn is made far simpler if
>> there can be statements ahead of the this() call.) Users may find the lack
>> of additional constructors to be an arbitrary limitation (and they'd
>> probably be right.)
>>
>>  - Static fields.  Static fields seem harmless.
>>
>>  - Additional instance fields.  These are a much bigger concern. While
>> the primary arguments against them are of the "slippery slope" variety, I
>> still have deep misgivings about supporting unrestricted non-principal
>> instance fields, and I also haven't found a reasonable set of restrictions
>> that makes this less risky.  I'd like to keep looking for a better story
>> here, before just caving on this, as I worry doing so will end up biting us
>> in the back.
>>
>>  - Mutability and accessibility.  I'd like to propose an odd choice here,
>> which is: fields are final and package (protected for abstract records) by
>> default, but finality can be explicitly opted out of (non-final) and
>> accessibility can be explicitly widened (public).
>>
>>  - Accessors.  Perhaps the most controversial aspect is that records are
>> inherently transparent to read; if something wants to truly encapsulate
>> state, it's not a record.  Records will eventually have pattern
>> deconstructors, which will expose their state, so we should go out of the
>> gate with the equivalent.  The obvious choice is to expose read accessors
>> automatically.  (These will not be named getXxx; we are not burning the
>> ill-advised Javabean naming conventions into the language, no matter how
>> much people think it already is.)  The obvious naming choice for these
>> accessors is fieldName().  No provision for write accessors; that's
>> bring-your-own.
>>
>>  - Core methods.  Records will get equals, hashCode, and toString.
>> There's a good argument for making equals/hashCode final (so they can't be
>> explicitly redeclared); this gives us stronger preservation of the data
>> invariants that allow us to safely and mechanically snapshot / serialize /
>> marshal (we'd definitely want this if we ever allowed additional instance
>> fields.)  No reason to suppress override of toString, though. Records could
>> be safely made cloneable() with automatic support too (like arrays), but
>> not clear if this is worth it (its darn useful for arrays, though.)  I
>> think the auto-generated getters should be final too; this leaves arrays as
>> second-class components, but I am not sure that bothers me.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>


-- 
Kevin Bourrillion | Java Librarian | Google, Inc. | kevinb at google.com


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