Did you know ... Search Documentation:
Pack logtalk -- logtalk-3.77.0/examples/points/NOTES.md

This file is part of Logtalk https://logtalk.org/ SPDX-FileCopyrightText: 1998-2023 Paulo Moura <pmoura@logtalk.org> SPDX-License-Identifier: Apache-2.0

Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at

http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0

Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.

To load this example and for sample queries, please see the SCRIPT.txt file.

You can find the original description of this example (and a solution using SICStus Objects) at the URL:

http://www.sics.se/ps/sicstus/sicstus_32.html#SEC254

Suppose you wish to represent points in a two-dimensional space. The protocol you will have to define consists on the operation move/2, which allows you to move one point to a new position, and on the operation print/0, which prints the point position. From the base class point, which contains the indicated operations, we wish to build three variants. One class, bounded_point, in which one point can only move in a restricted area in space. One class, history_point, characterized from the particularity that each point recalls its previous positions. Finally, a class bounded_history_point combining the functionality of classes bounded_point and history_point.

At first sight, this looks like the kind of ideal problem to illustrate the advantages of the multiple inheritance mechanisms. However, this type of solution holds several problems. If the methods move/2 and print/0 are inherited by bounded_history_point of classes history_point and bounded_point simultaneously, then one point will be moved and shown twice. If the inheritance is carried out, for each method, only from one of the superclasses (assuming that it is possible to do so, only by breaking the apparent problem symmetry), then the interfaces of classes history_point and bounded_point will have to contain separately the necessary operations to verify the limits (in the case of bounded_point), or to recall the previous positions (in the case of history_point). This way, the class bounded_history_point could build its own versions of methods move/2 and print/0, adding to the inherited definitions of one of the superclasses the calling of the operation missing in the other superclass. This is the solution adapted in the SICStus Objects. However, this solution also implies a few problems. Let's suppose that method move/2 is inherited from class history_point. Then, any changing operated in the definition of the same method in class bounded_point is ignored by bounded_history_point. The problem can be unnoticed, once the symmetry suggested by the use of multiple inheritance does not reflect on the present implementation.

The solution just suggested is, in short, a generalization of the problem previously described. Instead of using multiple inheritance, let's use composition mechanisms. In order to do so, let's separate the operations on one point, while an object state, of the classes representing each one of the point types. This can be achieved through the definition of two new categories, bounded_coordinate and point_history, that will define the operations associated both to the memorization of previous values, and to the verification of feasible limits for a coordinate value. Each one of the point, bounded_point, history_point, and bounded_history_point classes will import this category, using his operations to define the methods affecting the solutions that use multiple inheritance.