I have class structure where
public abstract class AbstractBuildingimplements some non-relevant interfaces for this question.public abstract class AbstractAnimalBuilding extends AbstractBuiling
And small number of classes following this structure:public class AnimalBuildingA extends AbstractAnimalBuildingpublic class AnimalBuildingB extends AbstractAnimalBuildingpublic class AnimalBuildingC extends AbstractAnimalBuildingpublic class AnimalBuildingD extends AbstractAnimalBuilding
In a totally separate class I have the following method:
@FXML
private Button btnAnimalBuildingA;
@FXML
private Button btnAnimalBuildingB;
@FXML
private Button btnAnimalBuildingC;
@FXML
private Button btnAnimalBuildingD;
for (AbstractAnimalBuilding animalBuilding: animalBuildings){
if (animalBuilding instanceof AnimalBuildingA) {
changeButtonDisplay(btnAnimalBuildingA)
} else if (animalBuilding instanceof AnimalBuildingB){
changeButtonDisplay(btnAnimalBuildingB)
} else if (animalBuilding instanceof AnimalBuildingC) {
changeButtonDisplay(btnAnimalBuildingC)
} else if (animalBuilding instanceof AnimalBuildingD){
changeButtonDisplay(btnAnimalBuildingD)
//Do something specific here
}
}
private void changeButtonDisplay(Button buttonToChange){
button.setVisible(true);
}
Where animalBuildings is a Set<AbstractAnimalBuilding> containing any combination of AnimalBuildingX's.
Assuming the structure at the top needs to be kept (eg, AnimalBuildingX HAS to extend AbstractAnimalBuilding), what would be a better approach than the multiple if-then-else statements in determining what kind of building animalBuilding is?
Would it feasible to simply create a new Interface as outlined in this question and have each AnimalBuildingX implement it while still extending AbstractAnimalBuilding or is there a way I can do it using the structure I currently have.