[PATCH] 8178117: Add public state constructors for Int/Long/DoubleSummaryStatistics

Chris Dennis chris.w.dennis at gmail.com
Tue Apr 11 20:48:03 UTC 2017


Color me confused… what would the javadoc on the parameter say? It could I guess have an @implNote documenting the meanings of the parameters… but then what use is it? The proposed API simply limits the precision with which a DoubleSummaryStatistic can be copied to be the same as the precision with which it can be “accessed”.  That doesn’t seem an enormous problem since I suspect that bulk of usages would be to marshall a “finished” instance and therefore there is no real loss occuring. If we wanted to support arbitrary precision wouldn’t it be better to have a constructor variant that took a BigDecimal, and a matching getPreciseSum() that returned a BigDecimal?

Chris

> On Apr 11, 2017, at 4:16 PM, joe darcy <joe.darcy at oracle.com> wrote:
> 
> On an API design note, I would prefer to DoubleSummaryStatistics took a double... argument to pass in the state of the summation. This flexibility is necessary to more fully preserve the computed sum. Also, the we want flexibility to change the amount of internal state DoubleSummaryStats keeps so we don't want to hard-code that into as aspect of the API.
> 
> Thanks,
> 
> -Joe
> 
> 
> On 4/11/2017 12:53 PM, Paul Sandoz wrote:
>> Hi Chris,
>> 
>> Thanks for looking at this.
>> 
>> There is some rudimentary testing using streams in CollectAndSummaryStatisticsTest.java.
>> 
>> I think we should enforce constraints where we reliably can:
>> 
>> 1) count >= 0
>> 
>> 2) count = 0, then min/max/sum are ignored and it’s as if the default constructor was called. (I thought it might be appropriate to reject since a caller might be passing in incorrect information in error, but the defaults for min/max are important and would be a burden for the caller to pass those values.) In this respect having count as the first parameter of the constructor would be useful.
>> 
>> 3)  min <= max
>> 
>> Since for count > 0 the constraints, count * max >= sum, count * min <= sum, cannot be reliably enforced due to overflow i am inclined to not bother and just document.
>> 
>> 
>> Note this is gonna be blocked from pushing until the new Compatibility and Specification Review (CSR) process is opened up, which i understand is “soon"ish :-) but that should not block adding some further tests in the interim and tidying up the javadoc.
>> 
>> Paul.
>> 
>> 
>>> On 6 Apr 2017, at 07:08, Chris Dennis <chris.w.dennis at gmail.com> wrote:
>>> 
>>> Hi Paul (et al)
>>> 
>>> Like all things API there are wrinkles here when it comes to implementing.
>>> 
>>> This patch isn’t final, there appears to be no existing test coverage for these classes beyond testing the compensating summation used in the double implementation, and I left off adding any until it was decided how much parameter validation we want (since that’s the only testing that can really occur here).
>>> 
>>> The wrinkles relate to the issues around instances that have suffered overflow in count and/or sum which the existing implementation doesn’t defend against:
>>> 
>>> * I chose to ignore all parameters if 'count == 0’ and just leave the instance empty. I held off from validating min, max and count however. This obviously 'breaks things’ (beyond how broken they would already be) if count == 0 only due to overflow.
>>> * I chose to fail if count is negative.
>>> * I chose to enforce that max and min are logically consistent with count and sum, this can break the moment either one of the overflows as well (I’m also pretty sure that the FPU logic is going to suffer here too - there might be some magic I can do with a pessimistic bit of rounding on the FPU multiplication result).
>>> 
>>> I intentionally went with the most aggressive parameter validation here to establish one end of what could be implemented.  There are arguments for this and also arguments for the other extreme (no validation at all).  Personally I’m in favor of the current version where the creation will fail if the inputs are only possible through overflow (modulo fixing the FPU precision issues above) even though it’s at odds with approach of the existing implementation.
>>> 
>>> Would appreciate thoughts/feedback.  Thanks.
>>> 
>>> Chris
>>> 
>>> 
>>> P.S. I presume tests would be required for the parameter checking (once it is finalized)?
>>> 
>>> <8178117.patch>
> 



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