Article image
Charlie Samoel
Charlie Samoel24/08/2023 07:34
Compartir

Exemplo em código de Singleton, Factory, Abstract factory, builder e prototype.

    Aprofundando os estudos em desgin patterns no grupo padrão de criação.

    Singleton:

    O padrão Singleton garante que uma classe tenha apenas uma instância e fornece um ponto global de acesso a essa instância.

    class Singleton:
      _instance = None
    
    
      def __new__(cls):
          if cls._instance is None:
              cls._instance = super().__new__(cls)
          return cls._instance
    
    
    # Uso do Singleton
    instance1 = Singleton()
    instance2 = Singleton()
    
    
    print(instance1 == instance2)  # True, pois é a mesma instância
    

    Factory Method:

    O padrão Factory Method define uma interface para criar objetos, mas permite que as subclasses decidam qual classe concreta instanciar.

    from abc import ABC, abstractmethod
    
    
    class Product(ABC):
      @abstractmethod
      def operation(self):
          pass
    
    
    class ConcreteProductA(Product):
      def operation(self):
          return "ConcreteProductA"
    
    
    class ConcreteProductB(Product):
      def operation(self):
          return "ConcreteProductB"
    
    
    class Creator(ABC):
      @abstractmethod
      def factory_method(self):
          pass
    
    
      def some_operation(self):
          product = self.factory_method()
          return f"Creator: {product.operation()}"
    
    
    class ConcreteCreatorA(Creator):
      def factory_method(self):
          return ConcreteProductA()
    
    
    class ConcreteCreatorB(Creator):
      def factory_method(self):
          return ConcreteProductB()
    
    
    # Uso do Factory Method
    creator_a = ConcreteCreatorA()
    print(creator_a.some_operation())  # Output: "Creator: ConcreteProductA"
    
    
    creator_b = ConcreteCreatorB()
    print(creator_b.some_operation())  # Output: "Creator: ConcreteProductB"
    

    Abstract Factory:

    O padrão Abstract Factory fornece uma interface para criar famílias de objetos relacionados sem especificar suas classes concretas.

    from abc import ABC, abstractmethod
    
    
    class AbstractProductA(ABC):
      @abstractmethod
      def operation(self):
          pass
    
    
    class AbstractProductB(ABC):
      @abstractmethod
      def operation(self):
          pass
    
    
    class ConcreteProductA1(AbstractProductA):
      def operation(self):
          return "ConcreteProductA1"
    
    
    class ConcreteProductA2(AbstractProductA):
      def operation(self):
          return "ConcreteProductA2"
    
    
    class ConcreteProductB1(AbstractProductB):
      def operation(self):
          return "ConcreteProductB1"
    
    
    class ConcreteProductB2(AbstractProductB):
      def operation(self):
          return "ConcreteProductB2"
    
    
    class AbstractFactory(ABC):
      @abstractmethod
      def create_product_a(self):
          pass
    
    
      @abstractmethod
      def create_product_b(self):
          pass
    
    
    class ConcreteFactory1(AbstractFactory):
      def create_product_a(self):
          return ConcreteProductA1()
    
    
      def create_product_b(self):
          return ConcreteProductB1()
    
    
    class ConcreteFactory2(AbstractFactory):
      def create_product_a(self):
          return ConcreteProductA2()
    
    
      def create_product_b(self):
          return ConcreteProductB2()
    
    
    # Uso do Abstract Factory
    factory1 = ConcreteFactory1()
    product_a = factory1.create_product_a()
    product_b = factory1.create_product_b()
    
    
    print(product_a.operation())  # Output: "ConcreteProductA1"
    print(product_b.operation())  # Output: "ConcreteProductB1"
    

    Builder:

    O padrão Builder separa a construção de um objeto complexo de sua representação, permitindo a criação de diferentes representações do mesmo objeto.

    class Product:
      def __init__(self):
          self.parts = []
    
    
      def add_part(self, part):
          self.parts.append(part)
    
    
      def list_parts(self):
          return ", ".join(self.parts)
    
    
    class Builder:
      def build_part_a(self):
          pass
    
    
      def build_part_b(self):
          pass
    
    
    class ConcreteBuilder1(Builder):
      def build_part_a(self):
          return "PartA1"
    
    
      def build_part_b(self):
          return "PartB1"
    
    
    class ConcreteBuilder2(Builder):
      def build_part_a(self):
          return "PartA2"
    
    
      def build_part_b(self):
          return "PartB2"
    
    
    class Director:
      def __init__(self):
          self.builder = None
    
    
      def set_builder(self, builder):
          self.builder = builder
    
    
      def construct(self):
          product = Product()
          product.add_part(self.builder.build_part_a())
          product.add_part(self.builder.build_part_b())
          return product
    
    
    # Uso do Builder
    director = Director()
    
    
    builder1 = ConcreteBuilder1()
    director.set_builder(builder1)
    product1 = director.construct()
    
    
    builder2 = ConcreteBuilder2()
    director.set_builder(builder2)
    product2 = director.construct()
    
    
    print(product1.list_parts())  # Output: "PartA1, PartB1"
    print(product2.list_parts())  # Output: "PartA2, PartB2"
    

    Prototype:

    O padrão Prototype cria novos objetos duplicando um objeto existente (protótipo) em vez de criar do zero.

    import copy
    
    
    class Prototype:
      def clone(self):
          pass
    
    
    class ConcretePrototype(Prototype):
      def __init__(self, value):
          self.value = value
    
    
      def clone(self):
          return copy.deepcopy(self)
    
    
    # Uso do Prototype
    prototype = ConcretePrototype(1)
    clone = prototype.clone()
    
    
    print(clone.value)  # Output: 1
    

    Esses exemplos são simplificados para ilustrar os conceitos de cada padrão. Em cenários mais complexos, os padrões podem ter usos mais sofisticados e vantagens adicionais.

    
    
    Compartir
    Comentarios (0)