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Ok, I may resort to a tad ranting here, so let me apologize in advance, but I'm really curious if others find this pattern annoying too (and I wonder if it is a justifiable pattern)…

So, after just looking at a particular question, I noticed that almost all of the responses suggested creating an interface for injecting a mock in some test code.

I don't mind using interfaces, and sometimes they can really help in static typed languages like C# and Java… but I do mind seeing interfaces for almost every class in a system (or in general being used where they aren't really needed).

I have 2 major problems with using an interface when it isn't called for:

  • You abstract away where the implementation is coming from. This problem has a couple consequences… in an IDE, it means that when I try to browse to the source of this method being called… I get taken to an interface instead of some code that I can look at and see what is going on. This bothers me a lot, but also this is a real problem to me to hide where the implementation is coming from (sometimes it can be in non-obvious locations).
  • It adds ANOTHER file to the system. I tend to be a minimalist in my programming… if I don't really need another method, or another class, or even another file… not unless that extra thing is justified (flexibility that is going to be used, or makes the design cleaner, or provides some real benefit).

Now… if you are testing something, and you create an interface JUST TO ALLOW MOCKING… this seems to be adding a layer of minor headaches for no real benefit. What does creating the interface do that just overriding the class won't do? What is so bad about having a mock that merely overrides some methods of the single implementation class?

I guess it should be no surprise then that I much prefer Java's default virtual methods (ie requiring a final keyword to have a method that CAN'T be overriden) to C#'s default final methods… and I also tend to avoid the final keyword on methods and classes too.

So is there something to using interfaces that I am missing? Is there some hidden benefit of using an interface when you have 1 version of a class and no immediate need to create an interface?

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Great question, thoughtful. Shouldn't be community wiki, you deserve get some rep for it. – Dale Halliwell Nov 21 at 16:07
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52 Answers

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vote up 49 vote down check

A big headache with interfaces in java and C# is that they give you so few options to evolve your contract. E.g.:

interface ILogSink {
  Log(DateTime timestamp, string message);
}

If you have a lot of different clients that all implement this interface you cannot change it without breaking their implementation. If you need to change it in the next version, you end up with something like:

interface ILogSinkVersion2 {
  Log(DateTime timestamp, string message, CultureInfo culture);
}

If you use a base class on the other hand, you can start out with:

class LogSink {
  void Log(DateTime timestamp, string message, CultureInfo culture);
}

And evolve it to:

class LogSink {
  [Obsolete("Please Log(DateTime, string, CultureInfo)")]
  virtual void Log(DateTime timestamp, string message) {
  }

  virtual void Log(DateTime timestamp, string message, CultureInfo culture) {
    // Call old method for old implementations:
    Log(timestamp, message);
  }
}

This way you can evolve your code without forcing every implementation of the contract to consume your changes immediately.

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I don't know how I missed reading this one, but yes, I 100% agree! Even more reason to reconsider using interfaces unless they really solve your problem well... – Mike Stone Sep 18 '08 at 10:46
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Programming to an Interface is good practise. The problem I think people have is that they take "program to an interface" too literally. A Superclass can be an Interface. – Craig Norton Oct 30 '08 at 15:18
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Don't forget that you can extend the interface as well. You can have ILogSinkVersion2 extend the ILogSink. This way no implementors or original ILogSink will get broken. "Open for extension, closed for modification" works for interfaces as well. – Danijel Arsenovski Sep 3 at 23:26
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vote up 16 vote down

I completelly AGREE WITH YOU!

I stated this in my ansewer: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/90657/mocking-method-results#90687

And I had to edit my answer twice to be clearer, because almost all answers suggested creating an interface to an UTILITY class. This kind of answer was even accepted. You should create an interface for testing purposes if it makes sense - which it does NOT in the context of the question.

Creating an interface is not even the biggest problem. I think the worst is obligate a client class to inject the interface implementation when calling a simple operation. This will increase the complexity all code using that class. This is very bad. It's a hack! A BAD hack! Why is it bad?

  • It's an Utility class. It's not likely to change implementation. So why even bother adding other layer of abstraction?!
  • Was suggested over and over to inject the Utility class implementation in classes that uses it. Now code that looks like this: myClass.loadData() will look like this: myClass.loadData(new HelperImplementation()). NO!!
  • +1 to all the points stated by Mike
  • There are other - more elegant - ways.
  • Must be other reasons why it's bad. :)
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vote up 2 vote down

You abstract away where the implementation is coming from. This problem has a couple consequences... in an IDE, it means that when I try to browse to the source of this method being called... I get taken to an interface instead of some code that I can look at and see what is going on. This bothers me a lot, but also this is a real problem to me to hide where the implementation is coming from (sometimes it can be in non-obvious locations)

This could be considered to be a problem with your IDE. For C# editing, I use Jetbrains ReSharper, and it has a natty "Go to Inheritor" feature that takes you from a method in the interface to the implementation. I suspect that other VS addons (Visual Assist, the DevX tools, etc.) will have a similar feature.

If you're on Eclipse (I'm not), I suspect that someone will have cooked up something similar.

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vote up 0 vote down

And the following is really good

Wikipedia:

One benefit of using interfaces is that they simulate multiple inheritance. All classes in Java (other than java.lang.Object, the root class of the Java type system) must have exactly one base class; multiple inheritance of classes is not allowed. However, a Java class/interface may implement/extend any number of interfaces.

And at least in Java EJB interfaces where used for defining home and remote interfaces. A very practical way of describing which functionality will be available from outside of your VM.

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You seem to be describing a legitimate use of interfaces... I'm more talking about using interfaces when multiple inheritance or multiple implementations is NOT NEEDED (which is more often than not). – Mike Stone Sep 18 '08 at 8:24
vote up 4 vote down

By programming against interfaces you're able to switch to implementation in a central place, e.g. a factory, a builder or dependency injection, which is a good thing.

The downside is a higher complexity, so using interfaces depends on your requirements/needs. If you have a fixed implementation that yould never change, let it be.

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The problem is, when you are done with your project and you have 50 interfaces with 1 implementation each, what did that added complexity gain you? I'm all for interfaces... but I say, bring them out when you see a pressing need for them. – Mike Stone Sep 18 '08 at 8:28
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vote up 0 vote down

Interfaces allows you to work in a higher level of abstractation. that's important if you're planning on adding more use-cases (=classes)somewhere in the future.

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vote up 39 vote down

If you have one class I can understand your hesitation with interfaces. According to Robert Martin's book Agile Patterns and Practices (I believe that's the name of it). In the book he describes the Dependency Inversion Principle. I don't believe he invented it but he's who made it click for me.

Basically the more you depend on interfaces the less fragile your software. This is an ideal though. I say break it where it makes sense. If you're not using interfaces more often than you are then there may be other problems. For example, just because you have different classes doesn't mean they should all have different interfaces. The interface segregation principle states that we should break up interfaces into the most reuseable atomic components possible.

For example imagine having 100 different data access classes (each for a different kind of entity). They could have their own interfaces but what if they shared a common ICrud interface? Then you know each supports the basic CRUD methods. In this way you should be looking to add consistency and order through out your code... ideally. No one's perfect at it (and productive) but it's a good ideal to strive for.

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I think "depending on an interface" can be replaced with "depending on a class that can easily have it's entire implementation replaced in a subclass"... but I agree with a lot of what you are saying. – Mike Stone Sep 18 '08 at 9:39
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The Dependency Inversion Principle is great. A complex system is a fragile system. If using DI for a concept makes your system less complex then you should use it, if it makes it more complex then stay away. – Hallgrim Sep 19 '08 at 17:36
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vote up 6 vote down

(And to think I almost failed a Software Engineering exam because I had placed interfaces only on classes that required it, rather than everywhere...)

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LOL, sorry to hear it! Sounds like your professor (or whoever was grading it) is stuck in theory land... – Mike Stone Sep 18 '08 at 8:30
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vote up 7 vote down

You do not add the interface for allowing mocking. In reality, if you need to mock something, is because there is a dependency on an external component, and the interface is used to decoupling that dependence, which in return allows Mocking, but thats a consecuence of a better design, not a requirement for mocking.

The problem with the question you link is this:

I want to have a known result from the Helper.GetSomeData() method. Can I use a mocking framework (I've got fairly limited experience with Rhino Mocks but am open to anything) to force an expected result? If so, how?

The user needs a deterministic result, so the only solutions are mock the helper, or just hardcode the value directly.

On your concerns:

If you try to brownse the code for an interface's implementation in your project you didt't code, chances are that you probably know beforehand what the implementation is (maybe because of a previouse debug trace), or that you IDE have an 'find all references' for that interface, or better utilities if you use third party plugins (an user said in this question that Resharper has a "go to inheritor' option) I don't think is a big deal.

Adding a new file is good. Really. Separate all files and implementations in numerouses files is not a bad thing, because we have tools that take that bunch of files and organize it in a proper structured way: a project. Your real concern here is not adding a new file, but adding new simbols you need to care about ,IMHO, which add complexity to the project.

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vote up 12 vote down

I'm with ya, but have always kept quiet about it. It is one of those cases where people become obsessed with 'the rule' and lose pragmatism in their designs. (Like bureaucrats becoming obsessed with the bureaucracy rather then the purpose.)

A few years back I took over a project that had zillions of single class implementations of a corresponding interface...in a closed system (The API was never externally exposed.) WTF? Grrr.

Interfaces have their place, but it's not everywhere. :P

On a side note, I cannot stand interfaces prefixed with I (E.g.: IMyInterface). Can anyone say Hungarian Notation? (For the hair splitters, it is 'Systems Hungarian Notation', to be specific.)

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YES YES YES! +1 – Mike Stone Sep 18 '08 at 8:31
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I prefer "interface Munger {..}; class MungerImpl {...};". MungerImpl is usually a private inner class of MungerFactory or similar. – finnw Oct 3 '08 at 13:48
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NO NO NO 0(zero). It's not really hungarian notation.. – Andrei Rinea Jan 26 at 14:04
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Prefixing with I is always done in Microsoft's API's, and this pattern is followed across the industry when coding in C#. Plus, it's nice to immediately know the difference between List and IList. I don't like Hungarian notation in general , but I do like this convention. – neilwhitaker1 Mar 9 at 23:18
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vote up 10 vote down

For me an interface should only be created when there's someone, somewhere which doesn't really care about who is implementing it as long as it's being implemented.

And that's the only place to use them, to define and agree on behaviour, any other use is probably misuse (some exception for particular cases allowed but generally speaking)

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In this situation, I would actually prefer a dummy implementation to an interface... as long as the class is written correctly, both achieve the same goal. – Mike Stone Sep 18 '08 at 8:52
vote up 5 vote down

Interfaces should be used with care - don't add too much abstraction when it is not necessary! The minimalistic approach is really good thing - it help for easier walk through the code after several months when nobody remembers the big interface hierarchy

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I can only see benefits. I for one never pass implementations as parameters. I only pass interfaces around. Its also useful when you are doing DI. Anyway. Who cares how a class is implement the consumer is only interested in the things it can use and an interface only gives him those things. Ok I admit it's a bit against the YAGNI principle but programming against interfaces becomes a habbit that you won't be sorry you did.

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vote up 2 vote down

in an IDE, it means that when I try to browse to the source of this method being called... I get taken to an interface instead of some code that I can look at and see what is going on. This bothers me a lot, but also this is a real problem to me to hide where the implementation is coming from (sometimes it can be in non-obvious locations).

This is a problem of your IDE. With IntelliJ you don't have this problem (ctrl+alt+b).

It adds ANOTHER file to the system...

Agreed. Though, in my experience projects with "heavy interface usage" are easier to maintain.

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vote up 3 vote down

I used to use interfaces for mocking but at least in C# with rhino mocks you can get around that (you'll be making a lot of methods virtual though.). I agree that using interfaces just for this is a waste.

Another reason to use interfaces is for decoupling dependencies. Instead of one class depending on another they can both depend on an interface, one by implementing it and one by consuming it. I still use interfaces a lot for this. In a model view presenter architecture I usually have the presenter depend on an interface on the view instead of on the view class directly. This can be a very useful tool for resolving circular references between assemblies in your code too.

Interfaces are also a good tool to be more flexible in the way you order your work. If you want to implement and test high level behaviour first without getting bogged down in low-level dependencies you can just implement the low level behaviour (like persistence or writing to a file) as an interface and mock it in your tests. Later you can decide if you want to implement the interfaces you made this way or remove them completely if they're not useful anymore. Interfaces that are implemented only once and are only used within an assembly usually get removed.

Another thing to keep in mind that it's usually better to create small interfaces and implement more of them in a single class than create big monolithic interfaces. This improves decoupling and flexibility in your object design.

@Mike Stone: I often remove pieces of code that don't carry their own weight when refactoring. That includes interfaces that don't add anything useful. I agree that dummy implementations of classes as scaffolding can be better when you dont intend to use an interface in the final version. Interfaces require less typing beforehand but more refactoring to remove them when you're done. I don't always know beforehand what I intend to use though.

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vote up 2 vote down

It's your choice if you want to go via mocking in TDD or not. TDD done the mocking way necessitates some use of interfaces. However, I do agree with you to some extent and feel that sometimes intensive interfaces mean that objects that are meant to be stubbed are instead mocked, and there's a wide difference between the two, or it's a case of TDD gone wrong.

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vote up 6 vote down

I think the arguments that you provide against interfaces are not valid at all. For me programming is not about how many files you have in the application, or how easy it is to go to the source of something. Programming is about making things work the right way. Now, I've participated in the implementation of applications that expose extensive APIs and are used by many other developers. If I didn't use interfaces, I doubt I would be able to make users of these products happy. In short I think you are irritated by the IDE, as Roger said, not the interfaces themselves.

and you create an interface JUST TO ALLOW MOCKING

If you can mock an object, then it means that you can extend it and you have the flexibility to add additional functionality to the released product. So in fact there's no "just to allow mocking", mocking rather adds visibility to some design flaws you may have in the product. It is the same as with unit testing - only after you start doing it you realise how bad you clients felt with your product.

And finally, I also think that interfaces allow multiple inheritance in languages that otherwise don't support it. So my advice to you is to get the right tools for your IDE and don't confuse programming experience with the final result.

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vote up -2 vote down

Interfaces are just a great mechanism that allow proxying/call-interception...

Mocking is just one application of that technique. Lazy loading is another very interesting application.

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vote up -2 vote down

An issue with favouring mocking (or any kind of runtime substition) through subclassing, rather than through an interface, is that you can only override the behaviour of virtual members.

Invoking a virtual member requires an additional level of indirection via a Vtable and is slower than a final member. Whereas using an interface adds a compile-time overhead, but using virtual members adds a runtime overhead to every member invocation.

Surely, adding an interface **just to support mocking** is far preferable to slowing down your entire app **just to suport mocking**?

My preference, therefore, is to favour 'final by default'.

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vote up 19 vote down

Ok, I just wanted to thank everyone for all the great responses (I added comments on most of them for what I felt on each individual one)! It seems there is a strong division of people who firmly believe interface overuse is a good thing, and those who are on my side of the fence of believing they are a sign of a problem (and an antipattern).

Let me add 1 thing to all of you who seem to think creating an interface for just 1 class is a Good Thing:

Consider a class that does nothing in the constructor, except maybe set some fields and invoke some protected methods (which could then be overridden in both a mock and an alternate version of the class that some client decides they want to create). Now, how does this differ from an interface, realistically? Both are equally flexible to the client, but the class has the added benefit of being less complex. Essentially, the class is now an interface that also happens to be a default implementation.

If that clicks for you, you probably just realized why interfaces for 1 implementation bothers me so much.

Note that I am not talking about multiple inheritance... there are times where it is quite useful to be multiple things... but I say don't ANTICIPATE it... it is most likely not going to be needed... instead factor out the interface later when you see you DO need it (most IDE's have an "extract interface" refactoring tool).

There are 2 cases of interfaces being extremely useful that I can think of (off the top of my head) which I would jump on (and have) if I were going to implement such a thing:

  1. You have something that lends itself to a custom implementation... such as an Encoder type interface where there really is an obvious immediate need to have multiple options (most classes don't fall into this type of category in my experience).
  2. The class you are developing needs some kind of visitor pattern, where the code you are going to call may or may not need to be implemented by all clients... I'm talking about event callback sort of things, or higher order functions like map and reduce. (I guess this is kind of the same as option 1 now that I think on it more...)

Anyways, I'm not trying to say NEVER use interfaces... I'm trying to say evaluate it in each individual case, and try to see if there is going to be real benefit in adding the complexity to your system (there is no point in incurring unnecessary cost, right?)... like all patterns, patterns can be overused and applied when they don't actually give you any benefit, and I really believe interfaces are an overused pattern.

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vote up 5 vote down

Bottom line, if the interface is simplifying the test and making the implementation more complex than it needs to be, I consider it bad design... I would rather add a bit of complexity to the test and keep my implementation clean.

(ie, the interface should be simplifying the implementation, not the test).

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vote up 0 vote down

Classes are dead, long live interfaces. Qi4j

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Use case for creating an interface when there isn't an obvious need: The interface can make it easier to understand the basics of the class (looking at all of the public methods could add too much noise).

All language features are probably used too much (when they shouldn't be used) and too little (when they should be used). Overall I think that I have seen interfaces used a little too much.

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vote up 14 vote down

I have rarely seen interfaces "over-used" in my experiences, but it is certaintly possible.

Knowing when to use:

  • An interface
  • Simple inheritence
  • Abstract base class
  • Interface AND an abstract base class
  • Encapsulation/helper classes

are keys to good designs. You can't learn enough about this, and we can't talk enough about it. We can talk about the "fringe" cases (all 300 classes in this library have interfaces), but I think that's a waste of time. We already know that "creating interfaces just to support unit testing" (or any other "just to support.." phrases you can think of) is not the right answer.

Yet there are some simple rules (the "is-a" relationaship test comes to mind). There are also some obvious situations where interfaces are used (plug-in architectures, for example). I will offer this thought...

Most piles of code in a library (think about the 300 classes mentioned above) have some public-facing interface that is significantly less large than "the entire code", and normally less large than what the library needs to support itself. Presenting this as a series of interfaces is what you want to be thinking about. Designing these interfaces requires a different train of thought than the code design - you are thinking about the consumption of your code, not the implementation of it.

By including this thinking, and designing interfaces, you will most certaintly be rewarded in the later stages of development (assuming this is a reasonable large system with more than one developer).

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vote up 3 vote down

I would have added a comment....

For Eclipse, highlight the method and hit Ctrl-T, this will bring up the hierarchy of implementations for a method which will allow you to go to the implementation with a single click. This is especially useful with a Spring/Hibernate driving application where you want to skip all the proxies and reflection classes in debug mode.

On the broader topic of interfaces, I feel they're only needed when a factory of some sort is used, and preferably at component or application boundaries. A component that heavily uses interfaces internally and has a 1:1 interface:class ratio usually smacks of bad architecture or drinking the Spring koolaid (essentially the same thing). Adding an interface for the sole purpose of Mocking is injecting test code into your production code and should be avoided at all costs.

Lastly, you should note that you can extract interfaces out of a class with ease when needed with Eclipse (and probably most other major Java IDEs as well) although you might need to rename your file outside of Eclipse, refresh, and then do an extraction back to the original name. This process allows you to effectively rename the class without breaking all the links to it, which will now utilize the interface. You can also specify which methods you'd like to extract, which will quickly show you via compile time errors where you're referencing the implementation class directly.

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vote up 0 vote down

I couldn't agree more. Interfaces are like the "getters and setters" of the type system. Cruft that gets added everywhere whether it's necessary or not.

The trouble with interfaces is that they encourage inheritance and impose a hard hierarchy which makes your code brittle. Multiple inheritance? You should be using less inheritance, not more. Composition will set you free (and allow you to make all your classes abstract or final).

The mocking excuse is a red herring. Use automated specification-based testing and let the machine worry about mocking. Also, if you can't create real instances of any classes for testing because their methods may have destructive side-effects or have hidden dependencies on the state of the outside world, then you have flexibility problems that testing to interfaces is only going to encourage you to ignore.

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It seems to me that some of the difference in opinion here boils down to the issue of Test-Driven-Development. Personally, I am a great fan of TDD, but that is off-topic here, so let us skip that discussion.

The motto of TDD is Test First. You might rephrase that as Tests First. To get into the proper mindframe for TDD, you not only need to code your tests first, you should also make sure that you ensure that you think of tests as a first-order concern.

Once we have established tests as a first-order concern, the reason for the many interfaces becomes much more obvious. In Test-Driven projects many (almost all) responsibilities will have at least two implementations: the "real" implementation and the mock/test-double/fake-object. Since the "real" implementation and the test-double(s) should not share any code (otherwise you are not properly isolating your tests) it makes sense to have a interface rather than letting the test-double override all the public methods of the "real" implementation.

To summarize: Many commenters are arguing that interfaces are used incorrectly, when they are only used to facilitate mocking. But when you use a test-double - no matter if it is a autogenerated mock-object or a manually written fake - you will have created a second implementation of your contract. You might argue that the second implementation of the contract is of lower value than the "real" implementation, so that you should not allow it to influence the structure of your "real" code. But then you are actually taking issue with Test-Driven-Development, which is another (and larger) discussion.

Edit:

I love TDD, and it is patently false to try and claim an interface is needed for it. TDD just means testing first, not creating an interface for anything you use. Mike Stone

I did not claim that you need interfaces for TDD. I claimed that TDD frequently require you to create and use multiple independent implementations of the same contract: the "real" implementation and the test-doubles. My point was that this situation is exactly where using interfaces is appropriate.

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vote up 3 vote down

Interfaces can be good for decoupling modules of your system that are at different levels of abstraction - for example, see the Separated Interface Pattern (http://martinfowler.com/eaaCatalog/separatedInterface.html). In this specific case, I can see there being value in splitting into interface and implementation, even if there is just one implementation.

For example, following Domain Driven Design principles, you try to have a separate, rich, entirely "business-focused" layer. This layer may still require access to objects that come ultimately from the database. By defining a "Repository" interface with operations defined purely in domain terms within the domain layer, and then having it implemented by a class in the infrastructure layer (which knows all the data access details), you eliminate the dependency of the domain on any infrastructure code (i.e. you could happily compile your domain layer without requiring the infrastructure code to be present).

However, I do agree that introducing interfaces just to support testing, or creating them as a matter of course for every class seems very wrong.

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vote up 47 vote down

Interfaces are useful in order to add a level of abstraction early on in the design process. It will benefit the modularity of your code. If you have a big enough project (one that warrants using mocking) interfaces are useful, though for small projects this is most likely overkill. They can be used more than they need to be certainly, but if you take to heart the following guidelines you will know when to use inheritance and when to use an interface. Your code reusability and scalability will increase greatly when interfaces are used where appropriate!

The old explanation of when to inherit works nicely:

  • Is a - inheritance

    Your class is a subclass of a more generalized class, e.g. HouseCat inherits from Feline because a house cat "is a" feline.

  • Has a - member field

    A LittleGirl has a cat, so obviously she should not be a subclass to HouseCat (she is not a cat). It is best that she "has a" HouseCat member field.

    class LittleGirl
    {
        int age;
        string name;
        HouseCat pet;
    }
    
  • Performs - interface

    Interfaces should be used when a class or group of classes all have similar functionality, but when there is no obvious line of inheritance. Think of them as a certificate that says "this object performs this functionality."

    For example, a HouseCat might inherit from Feline, but implement the ICanHasChesseburgers (or ICanHazChzbrgrsPlz) interface. That way you have a BurgerJoint class with a method public CheeseBurger Serve(ICanHasCHeeseburgers patron) and be able to pass either Humans or HouseCats to the Serve method in order to feed them a Cheeseburger.

    This is useful because HouseCat does not inherit from Person nor vice versa. However, they both perform acts involving CheeseBurgers.

~ William Riley-Land

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What an adorable example! – Stuart B Oct 12 at 22:35
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Basic rule of thumb: If you only have a single class implementing an interface, and if you can't think of another possible implementation of the interface, you don't need an interface, at least not now. You can always refactor and add an interface later, if required.
I'd argue that you should not add interfaces because they are somehow required by your testing strategy. Unit tests are the most important tool developers have (in my opinion), but they should not force a particular design. Fix the test infrastructure if it forces interfaces on your design.

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