Strategy
Contents |
Intent
"Define a family of algorithms, encapsulate each one, and make them interchangeable" [GoF] That means to capture the abstraction in an interface and bury implementation in derived class, so that it lets the algorithm vary independently from clients that use it depending on the context.
When to use it
The strategy pattern is useful when there is a need to separate the implementation of a process from the class that uses it. There are several reasons that this can be useful.
- There are several different versions of the algorithm to implement.
- The algorithms are used in more than one place. Once and only once
- There is a need to create an encapsulation boundary around the algorithm to hide implementation details.
- The class using the strategy implements many different behaviours choosing which behaviour to use with if statements. Each choice can be represented as a strategy instead simplifying code and making the intent explicit.The strategy pattern is useful for situations where
- it is necessary to dynamically swap the algorithms used in an application
- many related classes just differ in their behaviour
UML Diagram
Example
An Example would be a tax program, where you have different methods of calculating the taxrates depending on the country.
Strategy vs State
The State pattern in terms of design is quite similar to the Strategy pattern, but they differ in the way they are used. While in the derived classes of the strategy pattern most of the times just one different algorithm is implemented, the derived classes of the state pattern usually represent an independent state of something. That means they have their own fields, methods and so on.