32

While designing my objects I find composition to be a better choice from the perspective of testability. The reason being, I can mock parts of the composition structure if I need to, while running unit tests. This is not possible if I have an inheritance hierarchy.

I would like to know if others have also found this to be a reason to prefer composition. Also what other testability pitfalls did you get into because inheritance was used?

6 Answers 6

33

I believe that the more you start to develop using design patterns, you'll find more and more often where composition is going to be favored over inheritance. I actually believe in the Head First: Design Patterns book that "Favor Composition Over Inheritance" is one of the primary design principles.

Your example of being able to mock up parts of the composition for testing is probably one of the best examples possible.

Edit: Although the basic principle in design patterns is to favor composition over inheritance, that doesn't mean that there aren't design patterns which utilize inheritance where it is needed. Another basic example is the decorator pattern, where you are coding towards an abstract superclass (although this is for type matching and not for implementing an "is-a" relationship).

3
  • 3
    Hmm...wish I knew why someone voted this down. If I knew a particular reason I could make an attempt to clarify or make modifications.
    – TheTXI
    Apr 17, 2009 at 14:59
  • 1
    Actually, "being able to mock up parts of the composition for testing" is not a good example at all. The true reason composition makes it easier lies in the technical limitations of most mocking tools. Remove those limitations, and mocking inheritance becomes just as easy as mocking composition. Apart from that, I fully agree that favoring composition over inheritance is a good idea.
    – Rogério
    Jul 26, 2009 at 18:14
  • 1
    Doesn't mocking parts of the composition also require dependency injection on top of it (making it an aggregation)? How would I access the component otherwise in the unit tests? Dec 20, 2016 at 13:35
10

It's not an either-or situation. They're not competitors.

Inheritance is rather easy to unit test, also. However, it sometimes requires mock concrete classes to test an abstract superclass.

Inheritance can easily be used improperly. Some designs look like "is-a" situations, but aren't really -- they're more nuanced. Sometimes it's really "behaves-like" where you need some kind of composition (a Strategy, for example) to separate behavior from other attributes.

2
  • Sounds a lot like Chapter 1 in Head First: Design Patterns, the "Strategy Pattern" where you are taught to design and code to an interface and not an implementation.
    – TheTXI
    Apr 17, 2009 at 13:57
  • Great point that it's not either-or. Lately, I find myself preaching so much about composition simply because "is-a" is so often mistaken for "behaves-like" -- at least in my experience. It's good to be reminded that they each have their place. Apr 17, 2009 at 14:58
9

The Gang of Four Design Patterns book is basically all about why to prefer composition over inheritance and offers many ways to do that. Some reasons:

  1. The number of classes increases the complexity of the codebase.
  2. In many newer languages, inheritance is limited to one class, while you can compose as much as you want.
  3. Base classes cannot be changed at runtime (essentially the issue behind what you are running into).
2
  • 2
    What does the number of classes have to do with this? Does composition imply fewer classes than when inheriting? Apr 17, 2009 at 14:01
  • Well maybe. The decorator pattern uses a combination of inheritance and composition, and results in fewer classes than if only inheritance had been used.
    – Parag
    Feb 9, 2010 at 9:33
6

I think the biggest reason why composition is easier to test is that (implementation) inheritance tends to create very coupled classes that are more fragile (Fragile Base Class) and harder to test in isolation.

Inheritance definitely has its uses, but I find myself preferring composition over inheritance more and more often.

1
  • 1
    I find it the only answer explaining differences of inheritance vs. composition in terms of testing. Deserves up-vote. Nov 14, 2012 at 12:11
3

"Favor object composition over class inheritance" is actually from GoF book. This conversation with Erich Gamma describes this idea from the book.

One important pattern that requires inheritance is a template method pattern. This pattern is widely used very handy so inheritance is here to stay. Another common pattern that would use inheritance is Composite pattern. The point I try to make is that don't discount inheritance at all, but I hope it's clear from just looking at so many common APIs anyways...

0

That depand on context. When class is simple and inheritance from simple common class (config/logger) then inheritance win. I'm other cases composition mostly win

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.