JJ.Framework.Business
1.5.6891.42469
Prefix Reserved
dotnet add package JJ.Framework.Business --version 1.5.6891.42469
NuGet\Install-Package JJ.Framework.Business -Version 1.5.6891.42469
<PackageReference Include="JJ.Framework.Business" Version="1.5.6891.42469" />
paket add JJ.Framework.Business --version 1.5.6891.42469
#r "nuget: JJ.Framework.Business, 1.5.6891.42469"
// Install JJ.Framework.Business as a Cake Addin #addin nuget:?package=JJ.Framework.Business&version=1.5.6891.42469 // Install JJ.Framework.Business as a Cake Tool #tool nuget:?package=JJ.Framework.Business&version=1.5.6891.42469
JJ.Framework.Business
Classes to support a business logic layer or an API.
OneToManyRelationship
/ManyToOneRelationship
- Makes it easier to keep parent-child relationships in your model in sync. If you add a child, its parent immediately changes too, and if you assign a child's parent, the parent's children collection is updated automatically.
Result
<T
> /VoidResult
/ResultBase
/IResult
- An elegant way of returning data, along with a
Successful
flag and a list of messages.
- An elegant way of returning data, along with a
ISideEffect
- Used for some polymorphism between small pieces of business logic that go off as a result of altering or creating data. For instance storing the date time modified or setting default values or automatically generating a name might all be wrapped in side-effects, that are executed upon calling methods, like
Create
,Update
andDelete
. Using separate classes for side-effects, creates overview over those pieces of business logic, that are the most creative of all, and prevents those special things that need to happen from being entangled with other code.
- Used for some polymorphism between small pieces of business logic that go off as a result of altering or creating data. For instance storing the date time modified or setting default values or automatically generating a name might all be wrapped in side-effects, that are executed upon calling methods, like
EntityStatusHelper.GetListIsDirty
- Compares two lists (a source list of data and a destination list of data). Determines whether a list is dirty. This means that it checks whether items were removed, added or changed. (The changing of items does not mean that the entities themselves are dirty, it means that a list position now points to another object.)
OneToManyRelationship / ManyToOneRelationship
Makes it easier to keep parent-child relationships in your model in sync. If you add a child, its parent immediately changes too, and if you assign a child's parent, the parent's children collection is updated automatically.
You start doing this by implementing OneToManyRelationship and ManyToOneRelationship classes:
class ParentToChildrenRelationship
: OneToManyRelationship<Element, Element> { }
class ChildToParentRelationship
: ManyToOneRelationship<Element, Element> { }
These two classes basically wrap a collection of children and a reference to a parent.
You may have noticed the Element
class in the example above. This would be your own class. You can use your Relationship
classes in your Element
class:
class Element
{
private ChildToParentRelationship _parentRelationship;
public Element Parent
{
get => _parentRelationship.Parent;
set => _parentRelationship.Parent = value;
}
public ParentToChildrenRelationship Children { get; }
public Element()
{
_parentRelationship = new ChildToParentRelationship(this);
Children = new ParentToChildrenRelationship(this);
}
}
The code above works, because ParentToChildrenRelationship
class can be accessed, as if it is a collection:
foreach (var x in element.Children) { }
The ChildToParentRelationship
wraps the parent, which can be accessed as follows:
_parentRelationship.Parent
Your Relationship
classes need some more work. You have to implement some methods. Their implementation is trivial:
class ParentToChildrenRelationship
: OneToManyRelationship<Element, Element>
{
public ParentToChildrenRelationship(Element parent)
: base(parent) { }
protected override void SetParent(Element child)
=> child.Parent = _parent;
protected override void NullifyParent(Element child)
=> child.Parent = null;
}
class ChildToParentRelationship
: ManyToOneRelationship<Element, Element>
{
public ChildToParentRelationship(Element child)
: base(child) { }
protected override bool Contains(Element parent)
=> parent.Children.Contains(_child);
protected override void Add(Element parent)
=> parent.Children.Add(_child);
protected override void Remove(Element parent)
=> parent.Children.Remove(_child);
}
So perhaps a little boilerplating to get it done. But the code is trivial. Internally the OneToManyRelationship
and ManyToOneRelationship
classes are simple. To keep your inverse properties in sync, it gives you exactly what you need, without being too obscure about what is going on.
There are edge cases under which the OneToManyRelationship
and ManyToOneRelationship
classes still work:
- Non-nullable parents.
- Parent and child not the same class.
- Multiple relationships between the same classes.
- Side-effects going off upon assigning parent or removing children.
- You can control the underlying collection type of the children, if you want.
- Using different property names than Parent and Children in your model.
They all require a slightly different code. The above is just the simplest example.
Product | Versions Compatible and additional computed target framework versions. |
---|---|
.NET Framework | net461 is compatible. net462 was computed. net463 was computed. net47 was computed. net471 was computed. net472 was computed. net48 was computed. net481 was computed. |
-
- JetBrains.Annotations (>= 2018.2.1)
- JJ.Framework.Text (>= 1.5.0 && < 1.6.0)
NuGet packages
This package is not used by any NuGet packages.
GitHub repositories
This package is not used by any popular GitHub repositories.
Version | Downloads | Last updated |
---|---|---|
1.5.6891.42469 | 1,806 | 11/14/2018 |