Monsters design
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(New page: This design appeared in the 2004 exam. image:Monsters.gif == Design notes == * This is an incomplete framework of classes that track the behaviour of ''Monster''s. More types of ''...) |
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Revision as of 04:51, 19 August 2008
This design appeared in the 2004 exam.
Design notes
- This is an incomplete framework of classes that track the behaviour of Monsters. More types of Monster are expected to be added later.
- The DarkPlaces in which Monsters live and the Humans on which they prey are also modelled.
- EtherealMonsters are bodiless; they can walk through walls.
- CorporealMonsters have bodies; they can bite().
- A Demon can exist only by possessing some other monster. It takes over control of the possessed Monster.
- A Mimic pretends to be another CorporealMonster. Usually, it just forwards messages to the original monster, but it can vary behaviour if it wants to.
- A Vampire can change its style between behaving like a person and behaving like a bat.
- A Lycan is a Human turned into a hairy Monster. When its fullmoon() method is invoked, it tries to hunt a Human and bite() him/her. The bite() of a Lycan turns the victim into another Lycan of the same type.
- Monsters lurk in DarkPlaces: UnderBeds, in Wardrobes and Dungeons. If a Dungeon is a Labyrinth, it can have other Dungeons inside it, but it cannot if it is a Cavern.
- Monsters and Humans can use an Explorer subclass to look around inside DarkPlaces.
- Constructors, getters and setters, and many methods have been omitted from the diagram. Make reasonable assumptions where necessary and state them.
Spot the GoF pattern
Dungeon: Composite