Before anything, thanks for reading!
I'm developing an application in C++ and I want an advice about a design issue. Let me explain:
The main class of my application has some collections, but other classes eventually need to get a value from one of those collections. Something like this:
class MainClass {
private:
// Collections are internally implemented as QHash
Collection<Type1> col1;
Collection<Type2> col2;
};
class RosterUnit {
public:
RosterUnit() {
/* This method needs to get a specific value from col1 and
initialize this class with that data */
}
};
class ObjectAction {
public:
virtual void doAction() = 0;
};
class Action1 : public ObjectAction {
public:
void doAction() {
// This needs a specific value from col2
}
};
class Action2 : public ObjectAction {
public:
void doAction() {
// This needs a specific value from col1
}
};
My first approach was passing the whole collection as parameter when needed, but it is not so good for ObjectAction subclasses, because I would have to pass the two collections and if I later create another subclass of ObjectAction and it needs to get an element from other collection (suppose col3), I would have to modify the doAction() signature of every ObjectAction subclass, and I think that is not too flexible. Also, suppose I have a Dialog and want to create a RosterUnit from there. I would have to pass the collection to the dialog just to create the RosterUnit.
Next I decided to use static variables in RosterUnit and ObjectAction that pointed to the collections, but I'm not very happy with that solution. I think it is not flexible enough.
I have been reading about design patterns and I first thought a Singleton with get functions could be a good choice, but after some more investigation I think it isn't a proper design for my case. It would be easier and more or less the same if I use global variables, which don't seem to be the right way.
So, could you give some advices, please?
Thank you very much!