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Objective C - Strategy Pattern?

开发者 https://www.devze.com 2023-01-22 12:11 出处:网络
I understand the concept of the \"strategy pattern\" but I am still a little bit confused. Let\'say we have a class named Dog.

I understand the concept of the "strategy pattern" but I am still a little bit confused.

Let'say we have a class named Dog. Dog has MovementBehaviour (interface) which can be MovementBehaviourNormal and MovementBehaviourFast. MovementBehaviourNormal and MovementBehaviourFast both contain a method named move.

Question: what is the best way to access the dog attributes from 开发者_如何学编程the move method? Is it a bad idea to pass the dog object to MovementBehaviour as a delegate?


Generally, you shouldn't be accessing properties on Dog directly from your strategy object. Instead, what you can do is provide a move method that returns a new position based on the old position. So, for example, if you have:

@interface Dog : NSObject {
    NSInteger position;
    DogStrategy * strategy;
}
@property(nonatomic, assign) NSInteger position;
@property(nonatomic, retain) DogStrategy * strategy;
- (void)updatePosition;
@end

@implementation Dog
@synthesize position, strategy;

- (void)updatePosition {
    self.position = [self.strategy getNewPositionFromPosition:self.position];
}
@end
@interface DogStrategy : NSObject { }
- (NSInteger)getNewPositionFromPosition:(NSInteger)pos;
@end

// some parts elided for brevity

@interface NormalDogStrategy : DogStrategy { }
@end

@implementation NormalDogStrategy
- (NSInteger)getNewPositionFromPosition:(NSInteger)pos {
    return pos + 2;
}
@end

Then, when you instantiate a Dog, you can assign it the NormalDogStrategy and call [dog updatePosition] - the Dog will ask its strategy for its updated position, and assign that to its instance variable itself. You've avoided exposing the internals of Dog to your DogStrategy and still accomplished what you intended.

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