Difference between revisions of "Adapter"

From CDOT Wiki
Jump to: navigation, search
(Adapter Design Pattern)
Line 5: Line 5:
  
 
A good analogy for the Adapter pattern would be the adapter's commonly used to convert the voltage of Canadian/U.S made appliances to be used in different countries. In this case, the appliance ('''Target''') is using the adapter ('''Adapter''') to reuse the socket ('''Adaptee''') already in place.
 
A good analogy for the Adapter pattern would be the adapter's commonly used to convert the voltage of Canadian/U.S made appliances to be used in different countries. In this case, the appliance ('''Target''') is using the adapter ('''Adapter''') to reuse the socket ('''Adaptee''') already in place.
 +
 +
There are two specific types of adapter patterns - object adapter pattern and class adapter pattern. The latter uses multiple inheritance whereas the former uses an instance of the reuseable class it wants to adapt
  
 
== Object Adapter Pattern ==
 
== Object Adapter Pattern ==

Revision as of 19:05, 25 February 2007

Adapter Design Pattern

Adapter, a Structural Pattern and also referred to as a wrapper, is most commonly used when you want to reuse a class to work with a target class but are constrained by incompatible interfaces. The idea is to convert the interface of a reusable class into an interface that your classes expect.

A good analogy for the Adapter pattern would be the adapter's commonly used to convert the voltage of Canadian/U.S made appliances to be used in different countries. In this case, the appliance (Target) is using the adapter (Adapter) to reuse the socket (Adaptee) already in place.

There are two specific types of adapter patterns - object adapter pattern and class adapter pattern. The latter uses multiple inheritance whereas the former uses an instance of the reuseable class it wants to adapt

Object Adapter Pattern

Class Adapter Pattern

Adapter UML Diagrams

Code Examples

References

Other

Rueen Fiez
BTP600




--Rueen 19:41, 17 January 2007 (EST)