Open GoogleCodeExporter opened 8 years ago
Original comment by julianharty
on 19 Jun 2013 at 6:29
"* provide an option for the user to send information about the problem to the
project team". I totally agree this item. To be more precise, I'd like to know
which information that need to be sent to development team. I saw in many apps
(eg Chrome on Android in the attachment) there are lot of information inside. I
think we should concentrate to the essential information only. How do you think?
Original comment by tranquangminhtan@gmail.com
on 25 Jun 2013 at 8:53
Attachments:
Let's discuss the balance between the information that would be useful and
minimising the transmission of sensitive or unnecessary data.
Original comment by julianharty
on 25 Jun 2013 at 8:22
Here is the link to the BugSense documentation for integration of their API
https://www.bugsense.com/docs/android
For now let's keep the API key private. I have asked BugSense support for their
recommendations about the sensitivity of making the key visible on the internet
(which our code base is).
Julian
Original comment by julianharty
on 15 Jul 2013 at 3:18
Here's a good example of a user-centered error message in GMail:
"Something's not right.
We're having trouble contacting our servers. We're going to keep trying."
Currently our code swallows exceptions in many places instead of handling them
appropriately (e.g. retry, do something else, ask the user, cancel the
operation, etc). Let's focus on improving the way our code handles errors.
Original comment by julianharty
on 14 Aug 2013 at 8:12
The version of the app released at the end of Sprint 4 sometimes fails with a
NPE (NullPointerException) when the Download Books Activity launches
(DaisyBookDownloadBooks). The exception is not caught by our code or by
bugsense's global exception handler. Therefore we have more work to do on this
story to address these aspects. I'll help investigate the problem and share
some of my thoughts and ideas online so we can collectively learn and improve
the code.
Original comment by julianharty
on 21 Aug 2013 at 8:06
For instance, the most recent BugSense errors are related to the way the logic
in the app has been structured e.g.
https://www.bugsense.com/dashboard/project/cdc7bdaf/errors/334918321 (access
limited to the project team)
Here's my take on what's happening
The error being reported is in Navigator.java - within daisy-engine
So my first thought was - where's the bug in daisy-engine?
- what's causing the code to fail? especially when the stack trace is related
to the UI code. Then I noticed several related weaknesses in the current code.
They're related to the flow of control when there's a problem opening the daisy
book.
The user sees a reported problem, but the code then continues to try and open
the book, however the 'book' object is null therefore Navigator.java finally
raises an exception which causes flow of control to change.
Here's the worst offender
private void openBook() {
if (isFormat202) {
openBook202();
} else {
openBook30();
}
AndroidAudioPlayer androidAudioPlayer = new AndroidAudioPlayer(mBookContext);
androidAudioPlayer.addCallbackListener(audioCallbackListener);
mAudioPlayer = new AudioPlayerController(androidAudioPlayer);
mPlayer = androidAudioPlayer.getCurrentPlayer();
// get all navigator of book to push to table of contents.
mNavigatorOfTableContents = new Navigator(mBook);
mNavigator = mNavigatorOfTableContents;
if (!isFormat202) {
Navigator temp = new Navigator(mBook);
listId = new ArrayList<String>();
while (temp.hasNext()) {
Section n = (Section) temp.next();
listId.add(splitHref(n.getHref())[1]);
}
}
}
When an exception is raised in openBook202() and I assume similarly if one is
raised in openBook30() then flow of control should change e.g. to abandon
trying to open and read this book.
Currently the code tries to continue regardless so the subsequent code finally
crashes (well raises an exception)
Unit tests are good, and can help with some of the problems. however in this
case I think the main issue is we need to think through how errors should be
detected, reported and handled; and how these errors affect the flow of control.
In essence, a major challenge for us is to design the methods better. 'Better'
is a vague term, and I'm struggling to explain succinctly what sorts of
improvements are appropriate.
We can try applying TDD to some of this code (especially when it's non-UI
related) to help design better methods by considering, explicitly and early,
how we want the code to behave in various conditions (or circumstances).
Whenever there's code like:
if (isFormat202) {
openBook202();
} else {
openBook30();
}
we're not using OO, instead we're writing conditional logic that complicates
the codebase.
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/17015946/which-exception-to-throw-for-invalid
-input-which-is-valid-from-client-perspectiv
Original comment by julianharty
on 12 Nov 2013 at 12:50
Original issue reported on code.google.com by
julianharty
on 19 Jun 2013 at 6:28