Let's say we are trying to build a document scanner class in java that takes 1 input argument, the log path(eg. C:\document\text1.txt). Which of the following implementations would you prefer based on performance/memory/modularity?
ArrayList<String> fileListArray = new ArrayList<String>();
fileListArray.add("C:\\document\\text1.txt");
fileListArray.add("C:\\document\\text2.txt");
.
.
.
//Implementation A
for(int i =0, j = fileListArray.size(); i < j; i++){
MyDocumentScanner ds = new MyDocumentScanner(fileListArray.get(i));
ds.scanDocument();
ds.resultOutput();
}
//Implementation B
MyDocumentScanner ds = new MyDocumentScanner();
for(int i=0, j=fileListArray.size(); i < j; i++){
ds.setDocPath(fileListArray.get(i));
ds.scanDocument();
ds.resultOutput();
}
Personally I would prefer A due to its encapsulation, but it seems like more memory usage due to creation of multiple instances. I'm curious if there is an answer to this, or it is another "that depends on the situation/circumstances" dilemma?