Expert C++
上QQ阅读APP看书,第一时间看更新

Design patterns

Design patterns are one of the most expressive tools for programmers. They allow us to solve design problems in an elegant and well-tested way. When you are struggling to provide the best possible design of your classes and their relationship, a well-known design pattern may come to the rescue.

The simplest example of a design pattern is a Singleton. It provides us with a way to declare and use only one instance of the class. For example, suppose that the e-commerce platform has only one Warehouse. To access the Warehouse class, the project may require that we include and use it in many source files. To keep things in sync, we should make the Warehouse a Singleton:

class Warehouse {
public:
static create_instance() {
if (instance_ == nullptr) {
instance_ = new Warehouse();
}
return instance_;
}

static remove_instance() {
delete instance_;
instance_ = nullptr;
}

private:
Warehouse() = default;

private:
static Warehouse* instance_ = nullptr;
};

We declared a static Warehouse object and two static functions for creating and destroying the corresponding instance. The private constructor leads to a compile error each time the user tries to declare a Warehouse object in the old way. To be able to use the Warehouse, the client code has to call the create_instance() function:

Warehouse* w = Warehouse::create_instance();
Product book;
w->add_product(book);
Warehouse::remove_instance();

The singleton implementation of the Warehouse is not complete and is just an example to introduce design patterns. We will introduce more design patterns throughout this book.