This library provides some useful kotlin extension functions for implementing toString()
, equals()
and hashCode()
without all of the boilerplate.
The main motivation for this library was for situations where you can't use data classes and are required to implement toString()
/equals()
/hashCode()
by:
- hand-crafting your own :(
- using the IDE generated methods :(
- using Apache Common's ToStringBuilder and EqualsBuilder
- customizable
toString()
format (can replicate Kotlin's data class format) reflectionEquals()
andreflectionToString()
are super easy, but have awful performance- normal builders are still easy, but require lots of boilerplate
- customizable
- using Guava's MoreObjects
toStringBuilder()
performs better than Apache, but still requires the same boilerplate, and the format is different to the data class format (it uses braces instead of parentheses)- there's no equivalent builder for
equals()
(you're meant to use Java'sObjects.equals()
but that's lots of boilerplate) - it's a large library (2MB+) if you're not already using it
- or...something else!
Kassava provides extension functions that you can use to write your equals()
, toString()
and hashCode()
methods with no boilerplate (using the kotlinEquals()
, kotlinToString()
and kotlinHashCode()
methods respectively).
It's also really tiny (about 6kB), as it doesn't depend on any other libraries (like Apache Commons, or Guava). A special shoutout to Guava is required though, as the implementation of kotlinToString()
is based heavily on the logic in Guava's excellent ToStringHelper
.
How does it perform? Check the benchmark results below!
repositories {
jcenter()
}
dependencies {
compile("au.com.console:kassava:2.1.0")
}
// 1. Import extension functions
import au.com.console.kassava.kotlinEquals
import au.com.console.kassava.kotlinHashCode
import au.com.console.kassava.kotlinToString
import java.util.Objects
class Employee(val name: String, val age: Int? = null) {
// 2. Optionally define your properties for equals/toString in a companion object
// (Kotlin will generate less KProperty classes, and you won't have array creation for every method call)
companion object {
private val properties = arrayOf(Employee::name, Employee::age)
}
// 3. Implement equals() by supplying the list of properties used to test equality
override fun equals(other: Any?) = kotlinEquals(other = other, properties = properties)
// 4. Implement toString() by supplying the list of properties to be included
override fun toString() = kotlinToString(properties = properties)
// 5. Implement hashCode() by supplying the list of properties to be included
override fun hashCode() = kotlinHashCode(properties = properties)
}
Implementing equals()
with polymorphic classes (mixed type equality) is rarely done correctly, and is often the subject of heavy debate!
For a thorough explanation of the problem and possible solutions, please refer to both Angelika Langer's Secret of equals() article, and Artima's How to Write an Equality Method in Java article.
In a nutshell, using instanceof
is too lenient (and leads to implementations of equals()
that are not transitive),
and using getClass()
is too strict (classes that extend in a trivial way without adding fields are no longer candidates for equality).
Kassava supports a solution that originated in the Scala world, and is proposed in the linked Artima article (and also implemented in lombok for those interested).
The implementation makes use of a new interface SupportsMixedTypeEquality
with a canEquals()
method to achieve this. The purpose of this method is, as stated in the Artima article:
...as soon as a class redefines equals (and hashCode), it should also explicitly state that objects of
this class are never equal to objects of some superclass that implement a different equality method.
This is achieved by adding a method canEqual to every class that redefines equals.
Take a look at the unit tests for the kotlinEquals()
method, and you'll see how the Point/ColouredPoint/anonymous Point scenario in the article works (and how
classes that extend in trivial ways - with no extra fields - can still be considered equal with this method).
Here is an example of it in use (in a typical kotlin sealed class example).
Note the use of superEquals
, superHashCode
and superToString
in the subclasses - these are lambdas that allow you to reuse the logic in your parent class.
import au.com.console.kassava.kotlinEquals
import au.com.console.kassava.kotlinHashCode
import au.com.console.kassava.kotlinToString
import au.com.console.kassava.SupportsMixedTypeEquality
/**
* Animal base class with Cat/Dog subclasses.
*/
sealed class Animal(val name: String) : SupportsMixedTypeEquality {
override fun equals(other: Any?) = kotlinEquals(
other = other,
properties = properties
)
// only Animals can be compared to Animals
override fun canEqual(other: Any?) = other is Animal
override fun toString() = kotlinToString(properties = properties)
override fun hashCode() = kotlinHashCode(properties = properties)
companion object {
private val properties = arrayOf(Animal::name)
}
class Cat(name: String, val mice: Int) : Animal(name = name) {
override fun equals(other: Any?) = kotlinEquals(
other = other,
properties = properties,
superEquals = { super.equals(other) }
)
// only Cats can be compared to Cats
override fun canEqual(other: Any?) = other is Cat
override fun toString() = kotlinToString(
properties = properties,
superToString = { super.toString() }
)
override fun hashCode() = kotlinHashCode(
properties = properties,
superHashCode = { super.hashCode() }
)
companion object {
private val properties = arrayOf(Cat::mice)
}
}
class Dog(name: String, val bones: Int, val balls: Int? = null) : Animal(name = name) {
override fun equals(other: Any?) = kotlinEquals(
other = other,
properties = properties,
superEquals = { super.equals(other) }
)
// only Dogs can be compared to Dogs
override fun canEqual(other: Any?) = other is Dog
override fun toString() = kotlinToString(
properties = properties,
superToString = { super.toString() }
)
override fun hashCode() = kotlinHashCode(
properties = properties,
superHashCode = { super.hashCode() }
)
companion object {
private val properties = arrayOf(Dog::bones, Dog::balls)
}
}
}
While Kassava's usage is very readable and maintainable, how does it perform against the alternatives?
A Kassava JMH benchmark project was created to test this. You can see the test class implements all the variations of toString()
and equals()
, including:
- normal implementation (boring old IDE-generated style)
Objects
implementation (same as above, but with Java'sObjects.equals()
andObjects.toString()
)- Apache implementation
- Apache reflection implementation
- Guava implementation (for
toString()
only, there's no equivalent forequals()
- Kassava implementation (with reused properties array)
- Kassava implementation (with new array of properties each time)
The benchmark (using Kassava 1.0.0) was run on Travis with 10 warmup iterations, 5 test iterations, 1 fork, and measuring average time in nanoseconds. The raw results of the benchmark are:
Benchmark Mode Cnt Score Error Units
EqualsBenchmark.apacheEquals avgt 5 5.365 ± 2.447 ns/op
EqualsBenchmark.apacheReflectionEquals avgt 5 569.729 ± 5.990 ns/op
EqualsBenchmark.kassavaEquals avgt 5 84.647 ± 0.429 ns/op
EqualsBenchmark.kassavaEqualsWithArrayCreation avgt 5 87.274 ± 0.520 ns/op
EqualsBenchmark.manualEquals avgt 5 5.665 ± 0.081 ns/op
EqualsBenchmark.manualObjectsEquals avgt 5 6.866 ± 0.042 ns/op
ToStringBenchmark.apacheReflectionToString avgt 5 1484.542 ± 28.615 ns/op
ToStringBenchmark.apacheToString avgt 5 922.272 ± 52.431 ns/op
ToStringBenchmark.guavaToString avgt 5 344.156 ± 6.403 ns/op
ToStringBenchmark.kassavaToString avgt 5 416.654 ± 10.255 ns/op
ToStringBenchmark.kassavaToStringWithArrayCreation avgt 5 420.433 ± 7.425 ns/op
ToStringBenchmark.manualObjectsToString avgt 5 140.707 ± 2.457 ns/op
ToStringBenchmark.manualToString avgt 5 118.061 ± 2.196 ns/op
TLDR:
- Kassava's
equals()
implementation is definitely slower than manual/Apache/Guava (approx 15x slower), but nowhere near as bad as Apache's reflection implementation (approx 100x slower) - Kassava's
toString()
implementation is only slightly slower than Guava (and faster than Apache!) - Apache's
equals()
implementation is faster than the manual implementation??? (Magic?)
If you'd like to contribute code to this project you can do so through GitHub by forking the repository and generating a pull request.
By contributing your code, you agree to license your contribution under the terms of the Apache License v2.0.
Copyright 2016 RES INFORMATION SERVICES PTY LTD
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.