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I have a top class, lets call it Car. I have an interface, lets call it ITyre and then I have two classes which implement ITyre. Lets call them Goodyear and Bridgestone.

Am I allowed to have a composition association between the interface ITyre and Car (from UML perspective, not a particular language)?

1 Answer 1

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If you meant,

public class Car
{
    ITyre something;
}

Yes, you can. In fact it will be good if you do it this way. So that your Car is not depending on any one particular concrete implementation. Your implementation here will give you flexibility to swap out tyres (DI or factory) irrespective of who built them.

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  • A small addition: composition is a bit confusing as it defines ownership of an object. Naturally, composition implies an object being a part of a larger one. In case of interfaces only the interface is a part of the containing larger object. However, this is still a composition in a UML meaning. The Tyre object shouldn't exist without an owning Car object, doesn't matter whether it's by direct inclusion or via interface. Nov 2, 2012 at 9:30

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