I’m currently facing a design problem and would appreciate advice on how I could resolve it:
The problem
I will use an example to illustrate my problem note this is just an example:
Suppose you have an interface called Pass with methods listed:
public interface Pass {
public boolean hasPassedA();
public boolean hasPassedB();
public boolean hasPassedC();
}
Suppose you have a class which implement this interface called Assessor:
public class Assessor implements Pass{
// how should I implement this class ??
}
Finally Student class:
public class Student {
// some code that defines student behaviour not important.
}
The question is then how can I make the interaction between the Assessor and the student object a lot more flexible?
What I noticed is that an Assessor object should be something that is abstract because in reality there is no such thing as an Assessor, but instead you have different types of assessors such as a Math Assessor or English Assessor etc, which in turn will allow me to create different types of Assessor objects e.g.
MathAssessor extends Assessor
EnglishAssessor extends Assessor
The concept is that a Student can pass if all the methods declared in the Pass interface return true and all additional methods in the subjectAssessor classes return true.
What do I do in the Assessor class? I have read about adapter design patterns but haven’t fully grasped that notion or does it even apply to this situation?
Studentobject as a parameter? Or has each student its own bunch of assessors (i.e. each assessor only one student)? – Paŭlo Ebermann Sep 13 '11 at 18:14