Delegates: Difference between revisions
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Line 75:
return 0;
}
</pre>
==[[Python]]==
[[Category:Python]]
<pre>
class Delegator:
def __init__(self, delegate=None):
self.delegate = delegate
def thing(self):
if hasattr(self.delegate, 'thing'):
return self.delegate.thing()
return 42
def other(self):
if hasattr(self.delegate, 'other'):
return self.delegate.thing()
return 5
class Delegate:
def thing(self):
return 37
if __name__ == '__main__':
# No delegate
a = Delegator()
assert a.thing() == 42
assert a.other() == 5
# With delegate
a.delegate = Delegate()
assert a.thing() == 37
assert a.other() == 5
</pre>
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Revision as of 21:26, 3 October 2007
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You are encouraged to solve this task according to the task description, using any language you may know.
A delegate is a helper object used by another object. The delegator may send the delegate certain messages, and provide a default implementation when there is not delegate or the delegate does not respond to a message. This pattern is heavily used in Cocoa framework on Mac OS X
Objects responsibilities:
Delegator:
- Keep an optional delegate instance.
- Implement "operation" method, returning the delegate "thing" if the delegate respond to "thing", or the string "default implementation".
Delegate:
- Implement "thing" and return the string "delegate implementaion"
Show how objets are created and used. First, without a delegate, then with a delegate.
Objective-C
@interface Delegator : NSObject { id delegate; } - (id)delegate; - (void)setDelegate:(id)obj; - (NSString *)operation; @end @implementation Delegator - (id)delegate; { return delegate; } - (void)setDelegate:(id)obj; { delegate = obj; // Weak reference } - (NSString *)operation; { if ([delegate respondsToSelector:@selector(thing)]) return [delegate thing]; return @"default implementation"; } @end // Any object may implement these @interface NSObject (DelegatorDelegating) - (NSString *)thing; @end @interface Delegate : NSObject // Don't need to declare -thing because any NSObject has this method @end @implementation Delegate - (NSString *)thing; { return @"delegate implementation"; } @end // Example usage // Memory management ignored for simplification int main() { // Without a delegate Delegator *a = [[Delegator alloc] init]; assert([[a operation] isEqualToString:@"default implementation"]); // With a delegate Delegate *d = [[Delegate alloc] init]; [a setDelegate:d]; assert([isEqualToString:@"delegate implementation"]); return 0; }
Python
class Delegator: def __init__(self, delegate=None): self.delegate = delegate def thing(self): if hasattr(self.delegate, 'thing'): return self.delegate.thing() return 42 def other(self): if hasattr(self.delegate, 'other'): return self.delegate.thing() return 5 class Delegate: def thing(self): return 37 if __name__ == '__main__': # No delegate a = Delegator() assert a.thing() == 42 assert a.other() == 5 # With delegate a.delegate = Delegate() assert a.thing() == 37 assert a.other() == 5