Lets suppose we have a class Shape which has a method rotate(int velocity). This method makes a shape rotate with a speed of velocity(the parameter passed to rotate). This method has been called in a project, say at 100 places.
But now a new requirement comes, that the rotate functionality will also depend on the color of the shape, i.e. if the color is blue then the velocity should be decreased by 1, else no change should be made.
One solution to this problem would be to change the rotate(int velocity) method to rotate(int velocity, Color color), then add an if statement inside rotate method to check for the color, and make a change in 100 calls of rotate. E.g.
shape.rotate(50, blue) ;
Inside the rotate method,
void rotate(int velocity, Color color) {
if(color == blue)
--velocity ;
}
Another solution would be to make color as an instance variable of the shape object, and then without adding a new argument to the rotate method, simply set the color before calling it, and squeeze the if check inside the rotate method. E.g.
shape.setColor(blue) ; shape.rotate(50) ;Inside the rotate method,
void rotate(int velocity) { if(this.color == blue) --velocity ; }
Yet another solution would be to overload the rotate method and create a new method named rotate(int velocity, Color color) and use it in the new calls. This would leave the existing code which uses rotate(int velocity) unchanged.
Which of these would be the best possible solution? Or, does there exist a better solution? If yes, then what could it be?
Regards

rotate()but a property of the object with its own getter and setter. – Stephan Aug 1 '11 at 10:23