If certain patterns make no sense, then I think the master constructor
should reject them (if there is one, or perhaps one should be created as
a private one).

For example, if there is a width/height constructor, but I only specify
width and not height, then I think its fine to reject (null, height) and
(width, null) while accepting (null, null) and (width, height).

But I think I see what you mean better now, for example, there is
(Locale locale, String pattern) and (String pattern). If you intending
to pass `null` as Locale, why not just use the pattern-only
constructor?  I think that still could make sense, especially locale is
say coming from a configuration file or some such.  If the constructor
`null` here, then it makes it easier to use it programmatically (ie. if
my configuration has a Locale then I pass that, if it is null, I pass
that -- compare that to having to check for Locale being null and then
having to select the correct constructor...

--John

On 18/08/2025 21:00, Nir Lisker wrote:
>
>     Aren't these constructors chained?
>
>
> Not all of them. There are 3 tangential creation paths for
> DateTimeStringConverter and subclasses:
> 1. Through dateStyle/timeStyle ints with an optional locale that
> creates the DateFormat with `DateFormat.getDateTimeInstance(dateStyle,
> timeStyle, locale)` (similar for subclasses). There are 4 constructors
> here for the combinations of: none, only style(s), only locale, all.
> 2. Through a String pattern with an optional locale that creates the
> DateFormat with `new SimpleDateFormat(pattern, locale)`. If pattern is
> null, it uses path 1 above with default styles and the optional
> locale. If you wanted to use a pattern to create this converter,
> passing null makes little sense. It could be surprising to get a
> "defaults" converter when you intended to customize the format with
> your own pattern to begin with. I imagine that if you couldn't get a
> pattern, you'd use your own int styles as a replacement.
> 3. Through a DateFormat that is used directly. If it's null, it checks
> if the pattern is null (which it will always be), in which case it
> uses the defaults of path 1 again (with the default locale since it's
> not optional here). I find it odd here too to pass null and rely on
> the "defaults" converter.
>
> NumberStringConverter and its subclasses are similar. They have path 2
> with 4 combinations: none, only pattern, and locale, and both. And
> they also have path 3 that falls on the default if null.
>
> On Mon, Aug 18, 2025 at 9:06 PM John Hendrikx
> <john.hendr...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>     Aren't these constructors chained?  I believe it is quite common
>     practice to use nulls when calling a chained constructor to get a
>     default for that parameter.  If a certain type of convenience
>     constructor is missing, a caller can pass in `null` for the
>     parameter they'd like defaulted.  It's not too far-fetched to
>     allow this **if** there is a constructor where this parameter is
>     omitted and is assigned a default.
>
>     If anything, the constructors IMHO should document that for
>     certain parameters passing in `null` results in a specific default.
>
>     --John
>
>     On 18/08/2025 19:46, Nir Lisker wrote:
>>     Hi all,
>>
>>     In DateTimeStringConverter, NumberStringConverter, and their
>>     subclasses, null parameters sent to the constructors are
>>     internally converted to default values. This is not specified,
>>     but it's how the implementation behaves. I'm working on some
>>     changes there and was thinking about changing the behavior to
>>     throw NPEs as it makes no sense to pass null into these and it's
>>     probably a bug more than anything.
>>
>>     The LocalDate/Time converters specified the null-friendly
>>     behavior in their docs even though it doesn't make much sense
>>     there either.
>>
>>     Are we allowed to change this?
>>
>>     - Nir
>

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