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prototype.py
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prototype.py
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#!/usr/bin/env python
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
"""
*What is this pattern about?
This patterns aims to reduce the number of classes required by an
application. Instead of relying on subclasses it creates objects by
copying a prototypical instance at run-time.
This is useful as it make it easier to derive new kinds of objects,
when instances of the class have only a few different combinations of
state, and when instantiation is expensive.
*What does this example do?
When the number of prototypes in an application can vary, it can be
useful to keep a Dispatcher (aka, Registry or Manager). This allows
clients to query the Dispatcher for a prototype before cloning a new
instance.
Below provides an example of such Dispatcher, which contains three
copies of the prototype: 'default', 'objecta' and 'objectb'.
*TL;DR80
Creates new object instances by cloning prototype.
"""
class Prototype(object):
value = 'default'
def clone(self, **attrs):
"""Clone a prototype and update inner attributes dictionary"""
# Python in Practice, Mark Summerfield
obj = self.__class__()
obj.__dict__.update(attrs)
return obj
class PrototypeDispatcher(object):
def __init__(self):
self._objects = {}
def get_objects(self):
"""Get all objects"""
return self._objects
def register_object(self, name, obj):
"""Register an object"""
self._objects[name] = obj
def unregister_object(self, name):
"""Unregister an object"""
del self._objects[name]
def main():
dispatcher = PrototypeDispatcher()
prototype = Prototype()
d = prototype.clone()
a = prototype.clone(value='a-value', category='a')
b = prototype.clone(value='b-value', is_checked=True)
dispatcher.register_object('objecta', a)
dispatcher.register_object('objectb', b)
dispatcher.register_object('default', d)
print([{n: p.value} for n, p in dispatcher.get_objects().items()])
if __name__ == '__main__':
main()
### OUTPUT ###
# [{'objectb': 'b-value'}, {'default': 'default'}, {'objecta': 'a-value'}]