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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/FUNCTOR-1?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=13235341#comment-13235341
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Bruno P. Kinoshita commented on FUNCTOR-1:
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Hi Liviu! 

First of all, it's very clear you have put a lot of effort on this patch. I've 
applied at a local working copy of functor trunk, and it is very neat indeed. I 
wish my patches were as good as yours :-) 

I'm starting to learn about aggregators now, while reading the code and 
documents that you wrote. So feel free to correct or comment any of my points 
below.

* The documentation and examples provided are very good :-) However, I think 
you used <br/> to break line between paragraph, while the other examples use 
<p>. The visual is a bit different.

* After I read the issue and applied the patch (I had a quick view on it 
before, wow, so many tests :) I opened Eclipse and looked for the aggregator 
package, but it's aggregate. I think functor, generator and adapter package 
names follow the name of the pattern they implement. And I have seen aggregate 
and aggregator as the name of the pattern. What do you think? 

* How does an aggregator differs from the reduce function (like in map reduce)? 
IIUC, aggregators are like the fold function. A "nostore aggregator" is more 
like a fold with recursion, while the list aggregator is a fold function which 
stores its partial value somewhere. Maybe we could use FoldLeft with 
aggregators? 

* In the o.a.c.functor.aggregate.functions package, there are several 
aggregator functors for Double and Integer. The name of aggregators for Double 
start with Double. But the name of aggregators for Integer start with Int. In 
o.a.c.functor.generator.util, there are LongRange and IntegerRange. So I think 
in this case we could put both as Int, or both as Integer. What do you think?

* IIUC, in o.a.c.functor.aggregate there are classes for creating nostore and 
list aggregators. However, if I create a ArrayListBackedAggregator<T>, this 
aggregator extends AbstractTimedAggregator<T>. What means 
AbsractTimedAggregator<Integer> aggr = new 
ArrayListBackedAggregator<Integer>(); would be valid (not tested, but I think 
it works). I think these classes could be designed in some other way to avoid 
this scenario... just food for thought :)

* AbstractTimedAggregator<T> implements TimedAggregator<T>. But in 
TimedAggregator#onTimer, the first parameter is an AbstractTimedAggregator. I 
think this could be replaced by a TimedAggregator. What do you think? 
Otherwise, it would be like the interface had a dependency to a class that 
implements it. And if another class implemented TimedAggregator, it would have 
a dependency to AbstractTimedAggregator too. Or if AbstractTimedAggregator was 
deprecated/removed, it would cause problems in TimedAggregator interface.

The docs, examples and coverage are great. No issues in PMD, FindBugs or 
Checkstyle found so far. All licenses in place, as well as package javadoc. 
Next time I submit a patch I hope it can as neat as yours :-) 

There is an issue in Google Guava for similar feature, have you seen it 
(http://code.google.com/p/guava-libraries/issues/detail?id=546)? 

Cheers
Bruno
                
> [functor] New components: summarize and aggregate
> -------------------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: FUNCTOR-1
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/FUNCTOR-1
>             Project: Commons Functor
>          Issue Type: New Feature
>         Environment: JDK 1.6.0_25 but should work with any JDK 5+ (possibly 
> 1.4 though I haven't tested).
>            Reporter: Liviu Tudor
>            Assignee: Simone Tripodi
>            Priority: Minor
>              Labels: features
>         Attachments: commons-functor-aggregate+summarizer.zip, 
> commons-functor.patch.bz2, functor.patch.bz2, functor.patch.bz2
>
>
> This is the next step from https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/SANDBOX-340 
> -- as instructed I'm finally hoping to get the code in the right place and 
> hopefully this is something that the functor component could do with.
> Whereas initially I just started with the summarizer component, I have added 
> now the second one, the "aggregator" as they are somehow related. If this 
> code proves to be useful to functor in any way, it would actually be good to 
> get some feedback on these 2 to see if the class hierarchy can in fact be 
> changed to share some common functionality as I feel (probably due to the 
> similar needs that lead to writing/using these components) that somehow they 
> should share a common base.
> In brief, the 2 components:
> * aggregator: this just allows for data to be aggregated in a user defined 
> way (e.g. stored in a list for the purpose of averaging, computing the 
> arithmetic median etc). The classes provided actually offer the 
> implementation for storing data in a list and computing the above-mentioned 
> values or summing up everything.
> * timed summarizer: this is another variation of the aggreator, however, it 
> adds the idea of regular "flushes", so based on a timer it will reset the 
> value and start summing/aggregating the data again. Rather than using an 
> aggregator which would store the whole data series (possibly for applying 
> more complex formulas), this component just computes on the fly on each 
> request the formula and stores the result of it. (Which does mean things like 
> computing arithmetic mean, median etc would be difficult to compute without 
> knowing upfront how many calls will be received -- i.e. how many elements we 
> will be required to summarize/aggregate.) So the memory footprint of running 
> this is much smaller -- even though, as I said, it achieves similar results. 
> I have only provided a summarizer which operates on integers, but obviously 
> others for float, double etc can be created if we go ahead with this design.
> Hopefully the above make sense; this code has resulted from finding myself 
> writing similar components to these a few times and because it's always been 
> either one type (e.g. aggregator) or another (summarizer) I haven't given 
> quite possibly enough thought to the class design to join these 2. Also, 
> unfortunately, the time I sat down to make these components a bit more 
> general and submitted issue 340 was nearly 3 months ago so I'm trying to 
> remember myself all the ideas I had at a time so bear with me please if these 
> are still  a bit fuzzy :) However, if you can make use of these I'm quite 
> happy to elaborate on areas that are unclear and obviously put some effort 
> into getting these components to the standards required to put these into a 
> release.

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