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I'm looking for a good, clean way to go around the fact that PHP5 still doesn't support multiple inheritance. Here's the class hierarchy:

Message
-- TextMessage
-------- InvitationTextMessage
-- EmailMessage
-------- InvitationEmailMessage

The two types of Invitation* classes have a lot in common; i'd love to have a common parent class, Invitation, that they both would inherit from. Unfortunately, they also have a lot in common with their current ancestors... TextMessage and EmailMessage. Classical desire for multiple inheritance here.

What's the most light-weight approach to solve the issue?

Thanks!

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7 Answers

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Alex, most of the times you need multiple inheritance is a signal your object structure is somewhat incorrect. In situation you outlined I see you have class responsibility simply too broad. If Message is part of application business model, it should not take care about rendering output. Instead, you could split responsibility and use MessageDispatcher that sends the Message passed using text or html backend. I don't know your code, but let me simulate it this way:

$m = new Message();
$m->type = 'text/html';
$m->from = 'John Doe <jdoe@yahoo.com>';
$m->to = 'Random Hacker <rh@gmail.com>';
$m->subject = 'Invitation email';
$m->importBody('invitation.html');

$d = new MessageDispatcher();
$d->dispatch($m);

This way you can add some specialisation to Message class:

$htmlIM = new InvitationHTMLMessage(); // html type, subject and body configuration in constructor
$textIM = new InvitationTextMessage(); // text type, subject and body configuration in constructor

$d = new MessageDispatcher();
$d->dispatch($htmlIM);
$d->dispatch($textIM);

Note that MessageDispatcher would make a decision whether to send as HTML or plain text depending on type property in Message object passed.

// in MessageDispatcher class
public function dispatch(Message $m) {
    if ($m->type == 'text/plain') {
        $this->sendAsText($m);
    } elseif ($m->type == 'text/html') {
        $this->sendAsHTML($m);
    } else {
        throw new Exception("MIME type {$m->type} not supported");
    }
}

To sum it up, responsibility is split between two classes. Message configuration is done in InvitationHTMLMessage/InvitationTextMessage class, and sending algorithm is delegated to dispatcher. This is called Strategy Pattern, you can read more on it here.

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Amazingly extensive answer, thank you! I learned something today! – Alex Sep 22 '08 at 4:22
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It sounds like the decorator pattern may be suitable, but hard to tell without more details.

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The Symfony framework has a mixin plugin for this, you might want to check it out -- even just for ideas, if not to use it.

The "design pattern" answer is to abstract the shared functionality into a separate component, and compose at runtime. Think about a way to abstract out the Invitation functionality out as a class that gets associated with your Message classes in some way other than inheritance.

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Maybe you can replace an 'is-a' relation with a 'has-a' relation? An Invitation might have a Message, but it does not necessarily need to 'is-a' message. An Invitation f.e. might be confirmed, which does not go well together with the Message model.

Search for 'composition vs. inheritance' if you need to know more about that.

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PHP does support interfaces. This could be a good bet, depending on your use-cases.

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Interfaces do not allow for concrete function implementations, so they're not helpful here. – Alex Sep 22 '08 at 4:13
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Same problem like Java. Try using interfaces with abstract functions for solving that problem

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I have a couple of questions to ask to clarify what you are doing:

1) Does your message object just contain a message e.g. body, recipient, schedule time? 2) What do you intend to do with your Invitation object? Does it need to be treated specially compared to an EmailMessage? 3) If so WHAT is so special about it? 4) If that is then the case, why do the message types need handling differently for an invitation? 5) What if you want to send a welcome message or an OK message? Are they new objects too?

It does sound like you are trying combine too much functionality into a set of objects that should only be concerned with holding a message contents - and not how it should be handled. To me, you see, there is no difference between an invitation or a standard message. If the invitation requires special handling, then that means application logic and not a message type.

For example: a system I built had a shared base message object that was extended into SMS, Email, and other message types. However: these were not extended further - an invitation message was simply pre-defined text to be sent via a message of type Email. A specific Invitation application would be concerned with validation and other requirements for an invite. After all, all you want to do is send message X to recipient Y which should be a discrete system in its own right.

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