Lazy load pattern

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''An object that doesn't contain all of the data you need but knows how to get it''
  
 
= How it works =
 
= How it works =

Latest revision as of 08:23, 19 October 2010

An object that doesn't contain all of the data you need but knows how to get it

Contents

How it works

There are four different lazy load implementations

Lazy initialization

Every access to a field first determines if it's null. If so, it will query the database to retrieving the value (saving the value and then returning it). Works well, but need to ensure that every field access always uses getters and setters (even inside the class), and if null is a valid result there needs to be someway to represent that.

Virtual proxy

An object which looks like the object which should be in that field. When a method is called, that object then retrieves the data from the database. This does mean you need to create a lot of virtual proxies for each different type that needs to be queried.

Value Holder

Similar to the virtual proxy - except that there is only one generic type that can be anything. It will return the actual value which will need to be casted back to the correct type.

Ghost

A real object in a partial state. When it is first created, it only contains its ID. The first time that any field is queried, all the other fields are populated at the same time.

When to use it

It depends on how expensive database calls and memory is. If the class only contains data from a single row, then it isn't a good idea to use lazy loading (as it does not cost extra to bring back the rest of the data in the row). Consider lazy loading if a field requires a complex join operation and isn't frequently used.

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