I'm just reading up on the Chain of Responsibility pattern and I'm having trouble imagining a scenario when I would prefer its use over that of decorator.

What do you think? Does CoR have a niche use?

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please add kind of a task which you think is task for CoR but you solved it with decorator – Mykola Golubyev Apr 14 '09 at 14:48
Sure, I need to complete an order and in some cases I need to print a bill. My decorator solution is to have a core OrderCompleter wrapped in a OrderCompletionPrintDecorator which applies the conditional logic and prints. Works just as well as any chain. – George Mauer Apr 14 '09 at 15:01
Why couldn't you just have a method called "Print" inside OrderCompleter that can be used (or not) when you want (don't want) to print? In other words, I was wondering whether you could solve this task withOUT using any pattern at all? It doesn't seem to me like a complicated task with a real need for introducing abstraction and complexity. Or maybe what you said is just a oversimplified version of the problem. – Son Do 2 days ago
@SonDo It depends - but yes, it's an oversimplified version. The question is, where does the logic go about what makes something print? If it's a simple decision it could go right into OrderCompleter.Complete() but it could instead be something like this: "If the printing service responds to a ping and this order or a parent order has not been printed yet and the client placing the order does not integrate directly with our system." – George Mauer yesterday
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9 Answers

up vote 16 down vote accepted

The fact that you can break the chain at any point differentiates the Chain of Responsibility pattern from the Decorator pattern. Decorators can be thought of as executing all at once without any interaction with the other decorators. Links in a chain can be thought of as executing one at a time, because they each depend on the previous link.

Use the Chain of Responsibility pattern when you can conceptualize your program as a chain made up of links, where each link can either handle a request or pass it up the chain.

When I used to work with the Win32 API, I would sometimes need to use the hooking functionality it provides. Hooking a Windows message roughly follows the Chain of Responsibility pattern. When you hooked a message such as WM_MOUSEMOVE, your callback function would be called. Think of the callback function as the last link in the chain. Each link in the chain can decide whether to throw away the WM_MOUSEMOVE message or pass it up the chain to the next link.

If the Decorator pattern had been used in that example, you would have been notified of the WM_MOUSEMOVE message, but you would be powerless to prevent other hooks from handling it as well.

Another place the Chain of Command pattern is used is in game engines. Again, you can hook engine functions, events, and other things. In the case of a game engine, you don't want to simply add functionality. You want to add functionality and prevent the game engine from performing its default action.

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Well I can think of 2 situations:

  • You don't have a core object, i.e. you don't know what to do with the request after it passed all the layers/filters. (something like an aspect like interceptor chains that don't really care where the request ends).
  • You need to selectively apply some pre or post processing to the request. Not in a general enhancement form as the decorator does. i.e. Filters may or maynot handle a specific request but adding a decorator always enhances your object with some functionality.

Can't think of any more right now, would love to hear more in this topic.

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Chain

Avoid coupling the sender of a request to its receiver by giving more than one object a chance to handle the request. Chain the receiving objects and pass the request along the chain until an object handles it.

vs

Decorator

Attach additional responsibilities to an object dynamically. Decorators provide a flexible alternative to subclassing for extending functionality.

I'd say its around the order in which things will happen. If you chain them, the will be called along the chain. With a decorator you're not guaranteed this order, only that additional responsibilities can be attached.

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You can attach in different order, no? – Mykola Golubyev Apr 14 '09 at 14:53
If we're talking from the POV of a class consumer you're absolutely correct, if we're talking from the POV of the class designer however, you can certainly guarantee this as much as a chain could. – George Mauer Apr 14 '09 at 14:58
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Decorator is used when you want to add functionality to an object.

COR is used when one of many actors might take action on an object.

A particular Decorator is called to take an action, based on the type; while COR passes the object along a defined chain until one of the actors decides the action is complete.

COR might be used when there are multiple levels of escalation to different handlers -- for instance, a call center where the customer's value to the company determines if the call goes to a particular level of support.

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Ok, but my point is that you can use a decorator with just as much if not less effort. So why the heck even involve CoR? – George Mauer Apr 14 '09 at 15:37
But a decorator is a different pattern -- with COR, the object is passed from actor to actor until one says that it's completed the action; with decorator, the action is going to be performed on one particular class's implementation. – Ragoczy Apr 14 '09 at 17:15
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I'd say that a Chain of Responsibility is a particular form of Decorator.

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The difference between these patterns is not related to when or how the chain can be broken (which assumes a chain) or in when the extra behaviour is executed. They are related in that they both use composition in favour of inheritance to provide a more flexible solution.

The key difference is that a decorator adds new behaviour that in effect widens the original interface. It is similar to how normal extension can add methods except the "subclass" is only coupled by a reference which means that any "superclass" can be used.

The COR pattern can modify an existing behaviour which is similar to overriding an existing method using inheritance. You can choose to call super.xxx() to continue up the "chain" or handle the message yourself.

So the difference is subtle but an example of a decorator should help:

interface Animal
{
    Poo eat(Food food);
}

class WalkingAnimal implements Animal
{
    Animal wrapped;
    WalkingAnimal(Animal wrapped)
    {
        this.wrapped = wrapped;
    }

    Position walk(Human walker)
    {
    };

    Poo eat(Food food)
    {
      return wrapped.eat(food);
    }
}

class BarkingAnimal implements Animal
{
    Animal wrapped;
    BarkingAnimal(Animal wrapped)
    {
        this.wrapped = wrapped;
    }

    Noise bark()
    {
    };

    Poo eat(Food food)
    {
        bark();
        return wrapped.eat();
    }
}

You can see that we can compose a walking, barking animal... or in fact add the ability to bark to any animal. To use this extra behaviour directly we would need to keep a reference to the BarkingAnimal decorator.

All BarkingAnimal's also bark once before eating which has changed existing functionality and so is similar to a COR. But the intent is not the same as COR i.e. to find one Animal of many that will eat the food. The intent here is to modify the behaviour.

You could imagine a COR being applied to find a human that will take the animal for a walk. This could be implemented as a linked list like chained above or as an explicit List... or whatever.

Hope this is reasonably clear!

John

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Great points John! – Prisoner ZERO Feb 10 '11 at 13:53
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  1. keyword 'extends' - static extension.
  2. Decorator pattern - dynamic extension.
  3. Chain Of Responsibility pattern - just processing of a command object with a set of processing objects and those objects don't know each other.
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I agree that from structural standpoint this two patterns are very similar. My thought is about the final behavior:

In the classic interpretation of CoR element which handles the request breaks the chain.

If any element in decorator breaks the chain then it will be wrong implementation of decorator, because base part of behavior will be lost. And the idea of decorator is transparent addition of new behavior when the base behavior remains untouched.

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I think the situations to apply these two patterns are different. And by the way, for decorator pattern, the decorator should know the component which it wrapped. And for CoR, the different interceptors could know nothing of each other.

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