class Marble(object):
def __init__(self,color=None):
self.color=color # I'm assuming this is necessary,
# just because "colored marbles in
# a box" is so typical
def __repr__(self):
return "Marble({})".format(self.color)
class Box(object):
def __init__(self,name=None,marbles=None):
self.name = name
if marbles is None:
marbles = list()
self.marbles = marbles
def addMarble(self,color=None):
self.marbles.append(Marble(color))
def giveMarble(self,other):
# import random
index = random.randint(0,len(self.marbles)-1)
try:
other.marbles.append(self.marbles.pop(index))
except AttributeError:
raise NotImplementedError("Can't currently pass marbles to an "
"object without a marbles list")
def __str__(self):
return '\n'.join([str(marble) for marble in self.marbles])
a = Box()
b = Box()
for _ in range(10): a.addMarble()
print(a)
# Marble(None)
# Marble(None)
# Marble(None)
# Marble(None)
# Marble(None)
# Marble(None)
# Marble(None)
# Marble(None)
# Marble(None)
# Marble(None)
a.giveMarble(b)
print(b)
# Marble(None)
Python composition: marbles in a box
-
05-07-2023 - |
문제
Here's a toy problem dealing with multiple composition:
There are two object classes, representing marbles and boxes. A Marble is always contained in a Box, and a Box has a class method for representing the marbles that are currently in it. A Marble, once instantiated, should be capable of being passed to any other existing Box (or maybe even another object for extensibility).
What are the best patterns for implementing multiple 'has-a' composition in Python? (I've found single has-a examples, but didn't stumble across a multiple composition example).
My first guess, whatever it's worth, is to handle the Marble objects through methods contained in the Box class (e.g. create_marble, pass_marble, delete_marble methods) and maintain a list of Marbles as an attribute in the Box class. But is that really the best way to do this?
해결책
다른 팁
Yes it is, composition means that the owner object (Box) is responsible for create and destroy the owned objects (Marble).