Jeremie Pelletier wrote:
Andrei Alexandrescu wrote:
In this article:
http://www.gotw.ca/publications/mill18.htm
Herb Sutter makes a powerful argument that overridable functions
(customization points) should actually not be the same as the
publically available interface. This view rhymes with the Template
Method pattern as well.
This leads to the interesting setup in which an interface should
ideally define some signatures of to-be-defined functions, but
disallow client code from calling them. For the clients, the same
interface should expose some higher-level final functions.
Ignoring for the moment access protection semantics in D (which are
broken anyway), let's say this would work:
interface Cloneable(T) if (is(T == class))
{
private T doClone(); // must implement but can't call
T clone() // this is what everybody can call
{
auto result = doClone();
assert(typeof(result) == typeof(this));
assert(this.equals(result));
return result;
}
}
So clients must implement doClone, but nobody can ever call it except
Cloneable's module. This ensures that no cloning ever gets away with
returning the wrong object.
Pretty powerful, eh? Now, sometimes you do want to allow a derived
class to call the base class implementation. In that case, the
interface function must be protected:
interface ComparableForEquality(T)
{
protected bool doEquals(T);
final bool equals(T rhs)
{
auto result = doEquals(rhs);
assert(rhs.equals(cast(T) this) == result);
return result;
}
}
The difference is that now a derived class could call super.doEquals.
This feature would require changing some protection rules, I think for
the better. What do you think?
Andrei
What about:
interface ComparableForEquality(T) {
bool equals(T rhs)
out(result) {
assert(rhs.equals(cast(T)this) == result);
}
}
I want to cajole Walter into implementing contracts on interfaces as well.
Getting instead a contract that gets added to implementations, or at
least only the base implementation, and letting the actual method
unimplemented.
However having code for interfaces as well as protection would be neat.
They could prevent a lot of template mixins within every implementation
to get a common feature.
Note that NVI is about more than pre- and post-conditions. I'm actually
amazed that so many people latched so firmly onto the examples I gave
(as opposed to e.g. the examples in Herb's article).
Andrei