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.NET Design Patterns

You're reading from   .NET Design Patterns Learn to Apply Patterns in daily development tasks under .NET Platform to take your productivity to new heights.

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jan 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781786466150
Length 314 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (2):
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Praseed Pai Praseed Pai
Author Profile Icon Praseed Pai
Praseed Pai
Shine Xavier Shine Xavier
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Shine Xavier
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Table of Contents (15) Chapters Close

Preface 1. An Introduction to Patterns and Pattern Catalogs FREE CHAPTER 2. Why We Need Design Patterns? 3. A Logging Library 4. Targeting Multiple Databases 5. Producing Tabular Reports 6. Plotting Mathematical Expressions 7. Patterns in the .NET Base Class Library 8. Concurrent and Parallel Programming under .NET 9. Functional Programming Techniques for Better State Management 10. Pattern Implementation Using Object/Functional Programming 11. What is Reactive Programming? 12. Reactive Programming Using .NET Rx Extensions 13. Reactive Programming Using RxJS 14. A Road Ahead

The composite pattern and document composition


While representing part-whole hierarchies (tree-structured), the composite design pattern describes a group of objects to be treated in a uniform manner, as if the leaf node and interior nodes are instances of the same object. A document object can contain multiple tables, and we can nest tables as well. This is an instance of a part-whole hierarchy, and composite design pattern is a natural choice here. To create a composite, we need to declare a base class, and all objects should be derived from this base class:

    public abstract class TDocumentElement 
    { 
      public List<TDocumentElement> DocumentElements { get; set; } 
      //------ The method given below is for implementing Visitor     
      Pattern 
      public abstract void accept(IDocumentVisitor doc_vis); 
      //--- Code Omitted 
      public TDocumentElement() 
      { 
        DocumentElements = new List<TDocumentElement...
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