How can circular dependencies be avoided when callbacks are used? - Stack Overflow most recent 30 from stackoverflow.com 2009-12-17T08:55:24Z http://stackoverflow.com/feeds/question/149439 http://www.creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.5/rdf http://stackoverflow.com/questions/149439/how-can-circular-dependencies-be-avoided-when-callbacks-are-used 3 How can circular dependencies be avoided when callbacks are used? sk 2008-09-29T16:19:34Z 2008-12-23T08:39:30Z <p>How can you avoid circular dependencies when you're designing two classes with a producer/consumer relationship? Here ListenerImpl needs a reference to Broadcaster in order to register/unregister itself, and Broadcaster needs a reference back to the Listeners in order to send messages. This example is in Java but it can apply to any OO language.</p> <pre><code>public interface Listener { void callBack(Object arg); } public class ListenerImpl implements Listener { public Foo(Broadcaster b) { b.register(this); } public void callBack(Object arg) { ... } public void shutDown() { b.unregister(this); } } public class Broadcaster { private final List listeners = new ArrayList(); public void register(Listener lis) { listeners.add(lis); } public void unregister(Listener lis) {listeners.remove(lis); } public void broadcast(Object arg) { for (Listener lis : listeners) { lis.callBack(arg); } } } </code></pre> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/149439/how-can-circular-dependencies-be-avoided-when-callbacks-are-used/149457#149457 6 Answer by Herms for How can circular dependencies be avoided when callbacks are used? Herms 2008-09-29T16:23:50Z 2008-09-29T16:23:50Z <p>I don't see that being a circular dependency.</p> <p>Listener depends on nothing.</p> <p>ListenerImpl depends on Listener and Broadcaster</p> <p>Broadcaster depends on Listener.</p> <pre><code> Listener ^ ^ / \ / \ Broadcaster &lt;-- ListenerImpl </code></pre> <p>All arrows end at Listener. There's no cycle. So, I think you're OK.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/149439/how-can-circular-dependencies-be-avoided-when-callbacks-are-used/149478#149478 0 Answer by Sunny for How can circular dependencies be avoided when callbacks are used? Sunny 2008-09-29T16:28:27Z 2008-09-29T16:28:27Z <p>I'm not a java dev, but something like this:</p> <pre><code>public class ListenerImpl implements Listener { public Foo() {} public void registerWithBroadcaster(Broadcaster b){ b.register(this); isRegistered = true;} public void callBack(Object arg) { if (!isRegistered) throw ... else ... } public void shutDown() { isRegistered = false; } } public class Broadcaster { private final List listeners = new ArrayList(); public void register(Listener lis) { listeners.add(lis); } public void unregister(Listener lis) {listeners.remove(lis); } public void broadcast(Object arg) { for (Listener lis : listeners) { if (lis.isRegistered) lis.callBack(arg) else unregister(lis); } } } </code></pre> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/149439/how-can-circular-dependencies-be-avoided-when-callbacks-are-used/149693#149693 3 Answer by Mikael Jansson for How can circular dependencies be avoided when callbacks are used? Mikael Jansson 2008-09-29T17:09:13Z 2008-09-29T17:09:13Z <p>Any OOP language? OK. Here's a ten-minute version in CLOS.</p> <h1>Broadcasting framework</h1> <pre><code>(defclass broadcaster () ((listeners :accessor listeners :initform '()))) (defgeneric add-listener (broadcaster listener) (:documentation "Add a listener (a function taking one argument) to a broadcast's list of interested parties")) (defgeneric remove-listener (broadcaster listener) (:documentation "Reverse of add-listener")) (defgeneric broadcast (broadcaster object) (:documentation "Broadcast an object to all registered listeners")) (defmethod add-listener (broadcaster listener) (pushnew listener (listeners broadcaster))) (defmethod remove-listener (broadcaster listener) (let ((listeners (listeners broadcaster))) (setf listeners (remove listener listeners)))) (defmethod broadcast (broadcaster object) (dolist (listener (listeners broadcaster)) (funcall listener object))) </code></pre> <h1>Example subclass</h1> <pre><code>(defclass direct-broadcaster (broadcaster) ((latest-broadcast :accessor latest-broadcast) (latest-broadcast-p :initform nil)) (:documentation "I broadcast the latest broadcasted object when a new listener is added")) (defmethod add-listener :after ((broadcaster direct-broadcaster) listener) (when (slot-value broadcaster 'latest-broadcast-p) (funcall listener (latest-broadcast broadcaster)))) (defmethod broadcast :after ((broadcaster direct-broadcaster) object) (setf (slot-value broadcaster 'latest-broadcast-p) t) (setf (latest-broadcast broadcaster) object)) </code></pre> <h1>Example code</h1> <pre><code>Lisp&gt; (let ((broadcaster (make-instance 'broadcaster))) (add-listener broadcaster #'(lambda (obj) (format t "I got myself a ~A object!~%" obj))) (add-listener broadcaster #'(lambda (obj) (format t "I has object: ~A~%" obj))) (broadcast broadcaster 'cheezburger)) I has object: CHEEZBURGER I got myself a CHEEZBURGER object! Lisp&gt; (defparameter *direct-broadcaster* (make-instance 'direct-broadcaster)) (add-listener *direct-broadcaster* #'(lambda (obj) (format t "I got myself a ~A object!~%" obj))) (broadcast *direct-broadcaster* 'kitty) I got myself a KITTY object! Lisp&gt; (add-listener *direct-broadcaster* #'(lambda (obj) (format t "I has object: ~A~%" obj))) I has object: KITTY </code></pre> <p>Unfortunately, Lisp solves most of the design pattern problems (such as yours) by eliminating the need for them.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/149439/how-can-circular-dependencies-be-avoided-when-callbacks-are-used/149884#149884 3 Answer by Tanktalus for How can circular dependencies be avoided when callbacks are used? Tanktalus 2008-09-29T17:57:33Z 2008-09-29T17:57:33Z <p>In contrast to Herms' answer, I <b>do</b> see a loop. It's not a dependency loop, it's a a reference loop: LI holds the B object, the B object holds (an Array of) LI object(s). They don't free easily, and care needs to be taken to ensure that they free when possible.</p> <p>One workaround is simply to have the LI object hold a WeakReference to the broadcaster. Theoretically, if the broadcaster has gone away, there's nothing to deregister with anyway, so then your deregistration will simply check if there is a broadcaster to deregister from, and do so if there is.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/149439/how-can-circular-dependencies-be-avoided-when-callbacks-are-used/161516#161516 0 Answer by janm for How can circular dependencies be avoided when callbacks are used? janm 2008-10-02T09:35:41Z 2008-10-02T09:35:41Z <p>Use weak references to break the cycle. </p> <p>See <a href="http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157856/do-java-listeners-need-to-be-removed-in-the-finalize-method#157903">this answer</a>.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/149439/how-can-circular-dependencies-be-avoided-when-callbacks-are-used/325391#325391 0 Answer by Sébastien RoccaSerra for How can circular dependencies be avoided when callbacks are used? Sébastien RoccaSerra 2008-11-28T09:50:32Z 2008-11-28T09:57:54Z <p>Here's an example in Lua (I use my own <a href="http://luaforge.net/projects/objectlua/" rel="nofollow">Oop lib</a> here, see references to 'Object' in the code).</p> <p>Like in Mikael Jansson's CLOS example, your can use functions directly, removing the need of defining listeners (note the use of '...', it's Lua's varargs):</p> <pre><code>Broadcaster = Object:subclass() function Broadcaster:initialize() self._listeners = {} end function Broadcaster:register(listener) self._listeners[listener] = true end function Broadcaster:unregister(listener) self._listeners[listener] = nil end function Broadcaster:broadcast(...) for listener in pairs(self._listeners) do listener(...) end end </code></pre> <p>Sticking to your implementation, here's an example that could be written in any dynamic language I guess:</p> <pre><code>--# Listener Listener = Object:subclass() function Listener:callback(arg) self:subclassResponsibility() end --# ListenerImpl function ListenerImpl:initialize(broadcaster) self._broadcaster = broadcaster broadcaster:register(this) end function ListenerImpl:callback(arg) --# ... end function ListenerImpl:shutdown() self._broadcaster:unregister(self) end --# Broadcaster function Broadcaster:initialize() self._listeners = {} end function Broadcaster:register(listener) self._listeners[listener] = true end function Broadcaster:unregister(listener) self._listeners[listener] = nil end function Broadcaster:broadcast(arg) for listener in pairs(self._listeners) do listener:callback(arg) end end </code></pre>