I would like to know: are any GoF design patterns are used in the .NET Framework?
BOUNTY:
I have seen the MSDN link below in an answer. Are there any post/video or can you can list patterns and most importantly WHERE it is used?
I would like to know: are any GoF design patterns are used in the .NET Framework?
BOUNTY:
I have seen the MSDN link below in an answer. Are there any post/video or can you can list patterns and most importantly WHERE it is used?
The .NET framework uses many of the Gang of Four patterns. Here are just a few examples:
Creational patterns
System.Data.Common.DbProviderFactory
. Every member function of this class is a factory method. System.Data.IDbConnection.BeginTransaction()
. The type of transaction created depends on the underlying IDbConnection implementation.WebRequest.Create()
returns a concrete type that depends on the URL scheme.Structural patterns
System.Data.SqlClient.SqlConnection
, System.Data.OleDb.OleDbConnection
etc. Each provider is an adapter for its specific database.System.Windows.Forms.Control
and its derived classes.System.Web.UI.Control
and its derived classes.System.Xml.XmlNode
and its derived classes.System.Windows.Controls.Decorator
(in WPF).Stream
are decorators around an inner stream (e.g. GZipStream
, CryptoStream
).System.Xml.Serialization.XmlSerializer
. XmlSerializer hides a complex task (that includes generating assemblies on the fly!) behind a very easy-to-use class.System.ServiceModel.ClientBase<TChannel>
Behavioral Patterns
System.Web.UI.Control.OnBubbleEvent()
and System.Web.UI.Control.RaiseBubbleEvent()
. System.Windows.Input.ICommand
(in WPF).System.Linq.Expressions.Expression
and related classes.System.Collections.IEnumerable
.System.Collections.Generic.IEnumerable<T>
.System.Data.IDataReader
. System.Linq.Expressions.ExpressionVisitor
(used internally by [LINQ])Here's an article that discusses this very topic:
Discover the Design Patterns You're Already Using in the .NET Framework
And now the MVC pattern can be added with ASP.NET MVC. :)
EDIT: Since your edit / request for more info:
Here's an article that lists several patterns and where they are used in the framework.
Structural Design Patterns and .NET Framework 2.0
The Providers in .NET are all the Provider model pattern:
ASP.NET 2.0 Provider Model: Introduction to the Provider Model
The provider patterns in .NET also use the Strategy Pattern.
The factory pattern is used in several places and here's a sample where it's used in ASP.NET.
Exploring the Factory Design Pattern
Here's a webcast on DP's in .NET:
MSDN Webcast: Design Patterns in .NET
I haven't watched it so I am not sure how much it goes into how they are used in the Framework...
As already mentioned in a comment, the GoF patterns are likely all in use in the .NET framework. Where is not exactly the easiest to answer as the framework is massive and unless MS publishes as such listed in some of the examples given it is not always obvious. The more familiar one is with a pattern the more likely you would notice a framework class that was employing it.
Hopefully the extra links I have added help you.
Additionally, dofactory has a for sale kit ($79-99) that is about teaching how to use/implement GoF patterns in .NET BUT they do list on the reading they will also explain where MS uses them in the Framework.
Read the "Framework Design Guidelines: Conventions, Idioms, and Patterns for Reusable .NET Libraries". This book will show you the real design patterns that .NET was based on.
Definitely. For instance, Factory pattern is used in ADO.NET data provider classes. Singleton pattern is used in .NET remoting. Dispose pattern is used in resource management.
The BeginXXX and EndXXX methods in the BCL are based loosely on the Asynchronous Completion Token pattern.
Yes there are many design patterns used in .Net framework BCL. In fact this is the best Place to look at to learn the design pattern's usage in real term perspective.
Observer Pattern : Implemented as Events & Delegates
Decorator Pattern: Implemented in System.IO Stream classes
Iterator Pattern : IEnumerable & Iterator
Strategy Pattern : Implemented in Linq thru Lambda experssion queries (list.Where(expression))
Factory Pattern : In System.Net.WebRequest
Adapter Pattern : TLB Import / RCW (Runtime Calleable wrappers)
Please check out this video for detailed presentation on this topic.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=riHGGYHVoaQ&list=PL2_Cl8E2bG36PGuBGesHFPVM1s6M02JmN