I am learning GoF Java Design Patterns and I want to see some real life examples of them. Can you guys point to some good usage of these Design Patterns, preferably in Java's core libraries?
Thank you!
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I am learning GoF Java Design Patterns and I want to see some real life examples of them. Can you guys point to some good usage of these Design Patterns, preferably in Java's core libraries? Thank you! |
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You can find an overview of a lot of design patterns in Wikipedia. It also mentions which patterns are mentioned by GoF. I'll sum them up here and try to assign as much as possible pattern implementations found in both the Java SE and Java EE API's. Creational patternsAbstract factory (recognizeable by creational methods returning the factory itself which in turn can be used to create another abstract/interface type)
Builder (recognizeable by creational methods returning the instance itself)
Factory method (recognizeable by creational methods returning an implementation of an abstract/interface type)
Prototype (recognizeable by creational methods returning a different instance of itself with the same properties)
Singleton (recognizeable by creational methods returning the same instance (usually of itself) everytime)Structural patternsAdapter (recognizeable by creational methods taking an instance of different abstract/interface type and returning an implementation of own/another abstract/interface type which decorates/overrides the given instance)
Bridge (recognizeable by creational methods taking an instance of different abstract/interface type and returning an implementation of own abstract/interface type which delegates/uses the given instance)
Composite (recognizeable by behavioral methods taking an instance of same abstract/interface type into a tree structure)
Decorator (recognizeable by creational methods taking an instance of same abstract/interface type which adds additional behaviour)
Facade (recognizeable by behavioral methods which internally uses instances of different independent abstract/interface types)
Flyweight (recognizeable by creational methods returning a cached instance, a bit the "multiton" idea)Proxy (recognizeable by creational methods which returns an implementation of given abstract/interface type which in turn delegates/uses a different implementation of given abstract/interface type)
The Wikipedia example is IMHO a bit poor, lazy loading has actually completely nothing to do with the proxy pattern at all. Behavioral patternsChain of responsibility (recognizeable by behavioral methods which (indirectly) invokes the same method in another implementation of same abstract/interface type in a queue)Command (recognizeable by behavioral methods in an abstract/interface type which invokes a method in an implementation of a different abstract/interface type which has been encapsulated by the command implementation during its creation)
Interpreter (recognizeable by behavioral methods returning a structurally different instance/type of the given instance/type; note that parsing/formatting is not part of the pattern, determining the pattern and how to apply it is)
Iterator (recognizeable by behavioral methods sequentially returning instances of a different type from a queue)
Mediator (recognizeable by behavioral methods taking an instance of different abstract/interface type (usually using the command pattern) which delegates/uses the given instance)
Memento (recognizeable by behavioral methods which internally changes the state of the whole instance)
Observer (or Publish/Subscribe) (recognizeable by behavioral methods which invokes a method on an instance of another abstract/interface type, depending on own state)
State (recognizeable by behavioral methods which changes its behaviour depending on the instance's state which can be controlled externally)
Strategy (recognizeable by behavioral methods in an abstract/interface type which invokes a method in an implementation of a different abstract/interface type which has been passed-in as method argument into the strategy implementation)
Template method (recognizeable by behavioral methods which already have a "default" behaviour definied by an abstract type)
Visitor (recognizeable by two different abstract/interface types which has methods definied which takes each the other abstract/interface type; the one actually calls the method of the other and the other executes the desired strategy on it) |
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and many more I guess |
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The Abstract Factory pattern is used in various places. E.g., DatagramSocketImplFactory, PreferencesFactory. There are many more---search the Javadoc for interfaces which have the word "Factory" in their name. Also there are quite a few instances of the Factory pattern, too. |
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RMI is based on Proxy. Should be possible to cite one for most of the 23 patterns in GoF:
I can't think of examples in Java for 10 out of the 23, but I'll see if I can do better tomorrow. That's what edit is for. |
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I want to share with you with two nice links, that I have found searching for good description and (like kunjan kshetri) some real-life examples of Prototype Pattern anyway - I have read tons of web pages describing this pattern (because it was hard for me to find usage for it) and those 2 were to most useful and worth to mention http://ehsanbraindump.blogspot.com/2007/05/prototype.html http://steve-yegge.blogspot.com/2008/10/universal-design-pattern.html |
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Swing also uses the Composite Pattern |
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Even though I'm sort of a broken clock with this one, Java XML API uses Factory a lot. I mean just look at this:
...and so on and so forth. Additionally various Buffers (StringBuffer, ByteBuffer, StringBuilder) use Builder. |
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java.util.Collection#Iterator is a good example of a Factory Method. Depending on the concrete subclass of Collection you use, it will create an Iterator implementation. Because both the Factory superclass (Collection) and the Iterator created are interfaces, it is sometimes confused with AbstractFactory. Most of the examples for AbstractFactory in the the accepted answer (BalusC) are examples of Factory, a simplified version of Factory Method, which is not part of the original GoF patterns. In Facory the Factory class hierarchy is collapsed and the factory uses other means to choose the product to be returned.
An abstract factory has multiple factory methods, each creating a different product. The products produced by one factory are intended to be used together (your printer and cartridges better be from the same (abstract) factory). As mentioned in answers above the families of AWT GUI components, differing from platform to platform, are an example of this (although its implementation differs from the structure described in Gof). |
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Zed Shaw's essay Indirection is not abstraction gives an example from Sun Java's own CustomerBean.java
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