In software engineering, the delegation pattern is an object-oriented design pattern that allows object composition to achieve the same code reuse as inheritance.
Yes, that is a textbook copy and paste from Wikipedia ๐ฌ. I went for that quote as an opening as it is a concise description of the Delegation Pattern. Favouring composition over inheritance is something that is recited to almost every developer working with an Object Oriented language like Java and Kotlin. Using this pattern allows you to keep on the good side of the inheritance hating developers while still secretly writing code that is implementing an interface.
Ok, I can see you twitching (not really ๐). You want to know where Kotlin comes into play ๐ค.
Kotlin makes following the Delegation Pattern easier by providing the by
keyword. Using this keyword in your code allows you to implement ( not a class) an interface while delegating all of its functions to the delegate that by
has specified. All of the interface functions will then be satisfied without you needing to provide a single implementation yourself in your new class. One way to think about it is that the delegate basically becomes a pseudo abstract class.
You now can pick and choose which interface functions you want to provide your own implementation for. Any that you donโt provide are delegated down to the delegate. This is where the power comes in.
I think it is about time I showed you an example. Below is some code used in Corda (written entirely in Kotlin and is actually mentioned on the Kotlin homepage ๐๐). This is also the first time I saw by
being used:
class RestrictedEntityManager(private val delegate: EntityManager) : EntityManager by delegate {
override fun close() {
throw UnsupportedOperationException("This method cannot be called via ServiceHub.withEntityManager.")
}
override fun clear() {
throw UnsupportedOperationException("This method cannot be called via ServiceHub.withEntityManager.")
}
}
The above class does everything I was just talking about. So letโs take a closer look. RestrictedEntityManager
wants to implement EntityManager
. To do so, it uses the implementations provided by the delegate
property.
Note, the by
keywordโs use here. To me, this says, EntityManager
is implemented by
the delegate
property.
As the name RestrictedEntityManager
suggests, this class wants to restrict some of the EntityManager
โs functions. Overrides for close
and clear
are supplied and used instead of the versions provided by delegate
.
This leaves you with a new class, RestrictedEntityManager
that implements every function in the EntityManager
interface (51 functions if I counted correctly ๐ณ๐ต) while only writing 2 yourself. Not only does this allow you to be lazier, it is actually clearer and only relies on interfaces rather than concrete classes.
A piece of information from the Kotlin docs on this subject is rather important.
Note, however, that members overridden in this way do not get called from the members of the delegate object, which can only access its own implementations of the interface members
I said that the delegate was like an abstract class earlier. The statement above disproves that slightly, since the implementations you provide will not be used by the delegate at all. But, I still think the comparison is a nice way to think about it, you just need to remember this fact to prevent a mistake in the future.
Before I close this post, I want to compare the code above to a Java version. This will allow you to see how Kotlin provides you with tools to improve your code:
public class RestrictedEntityManager implements EntityManager {
private EntityManager delegate;
public RestrictedEntityManager(EntityManager delegate) {
this.delegate = delegate;
}
@Override
public void close() {
throw new UnsupportedOperationException("This method cannot be called via ServiceHub.withEntityManager.");
}
@Override
public void clear() {
throw new UnsupportedOperationException("This method cannot be called via ServiceHub.withEntityManager.");
}
@Override
public void persist(Object entity) {
delegate.persist(entity);
}
@Override
public <T> T merge(T entity) {
return delegate.merge(entity);
}
// and another 47 functions/methods ๐ฐ๐ฐ๐ฑ
}
The inclusion of that code comment on the last line should be enough to convince you of the elegance of the Kotlin solution. Just for clarity, all the missing methods are just delegating to the delegate
property. If you did make changes to some of the functions and did not order them nicely, you might find it hard to notice what you did. The Kotlin version on the other hand only includes the functions that have been altered and delegates the others by default.
To wrap up, this short post has taken a look at the by
keyword provided by Kotlin and how it assists you in leveraging the Delegation Pattern. Helping you take one more step on your path to becoming a super developer. Just put down that Java โ๐คฎ thing you are holding on to dearly and grab on to Kotlin with two hands ๐๐๐.
Just to protect myself. I have nothing against Java. Please donโt come and kill me! ๐จ๐จ
If you found this post helpful, you can follow me on Twitter at @LankyDanDev to keep up with my new posts.
Top comments (0)