Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- FOREWORD
- PREFACE
- INTRODUCTION
- 1 A DIAGRAM FOR OBJECT-ORIENTED PROGRAMS
- 2 CONSTRUCTING ABSTRACTIONS FOR OBJECT-ORIENTED APPLICATIONS
- 3 PLAYRGOUND: AN OBJECT ORIENTED SIMULATION SYSTEM WITH AGENT RULES FOR CHILDREN OF ALL AGES
- 4 A LABORATORY FOR TEACHING OBJECT-ORIENTED THINKING
- 5 THINK LIKE AN OBJECT
- 6 WHY STUDY SMALLTALK IDIOMS?
- 7 THE DREADED SUPER
- 8 ABSTRACT CONTROL IDIOMS
- 9 VALUEMODEL IDIOMS
- 10 COLLECTION IDIOMS
- 11 AN OBJECTWORKS\SMALLTALK 4.1 WRAPPER IDIOM
- 12 A SHORT INTRODUCTION TO PATTERN LANGUAGE
- 13 WHOLE LOTTA SMALLTALK: THE TECHNOLOGY
- 14 INSTANCE-SPECIFIC BEHAVIOR: HOW AND WHY
- 15 INSTANCE-SPECIFIC BEHAVIOR: DIGITALK IMPLEMENTATION AND THE DEEPER MEANING OF IT ALL
- 16 TO ACCESSOR OR NOT TO ACCESSOR
- 17 INHERITANCE: THE REST OF THE STORY
- 18 INHERITANCE: THE REST OF THE STORY (CONT.)
- 19 HELPER METHODS AVOID UNWANTED INHERITANCE
- 20 IT'S NOT JUST THE CASE
- 21 CRC: FINDING OBJECTS THE EASY WAY
- 22 DEATH TO CASE STATEMENTS
- 23 WHERE DO OBJECTS COME FROM?
- 24 PATTERNS AND SOFTWARE DEVELOPMENT
- 25 DISTRIBUTED SMALLTALK
- 26 WHERE DO OBJECTS COME FROM? FROM VARIABLES AND METHODS
- 27 BIRDS, BEES, AND BROWSERS—OBVIOUS SOURCES OF OBJECTS
- 28 USING PATTERNS: DESIGN
- 29 PATTERNS GENERATE ARCHITECTURES
- 30 SIMPLE SMALLTALK TESTING
- 31 ARCHITECTURAL PROTOTYPE: TELEVISION REMOTE CONTROL
- 32 DEMAND LOADING FOR VISUALWORKS
- 33 GARBAGE COLLECTION REVEALED
- 34 WHAT? WHAT HAPPENED TO GARBAGE COLLECTION?
- 35 SUPER + 1
- 36 CLEAN CODE: PIPE DREAM OR STATE OF MIND?
- 37 A MODEST META PROPOSAL
- 38 USES OF VARIABLES: TEMPS
- 39 VARIABLES OF THE WORLD
- 40 PATTERNS 101
- 41 FAREWELL AND A WOOD PILE
- AFTERWORD
- INDEX
19 - HELPER METHODS AVOID UNWANTED INHERITANCE
Smalltalk Report, October, 1993
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 August 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- FOREWORD
- PREFACE
- INTRODUCTION
- 1 A DIAGRAM FOR OBJECT-ORIENTED PROGRAMS
- 2 CONSTRUCTING ABSTRACTIONS FOR OBJECT-ORIENTED APPLICATIONS
- 3 PLAYRGOUND: AN OBJECT ORIENTED SIMULATION SYSTEM WITH AGENT RULES FOR CHILDREN OF ALL AGES
- 4 A LABORATORY FOR TEACHING OBJECT-ORIENTED THINKING
- 5 THINK LIKE AN OBJECT
- 6 WHY STUDY SMALLTALK IDIOMS?
- 7 THE DREADED SUPER
- 8 ABSTRACT CONTROL IDIOMS
- 9 VALUEMODEL IDIOMS
- 10 COLLECTION IDIOMS
- 11 AN OBJECTWORKS\SMALLTALK 4.1 WRAPPER IDIOM
- 12 A SHORT INTRODUCTION TO PATTERN LANGUAGE
- 13 WHOLE LOTTA SMALLTALK: THE TECHNOLOGY
- 14 INSTANCE-SPECIFIC BEHAVIOR: HOW AND WHY
- 15 INSTANCE-SPECIFIC BEHAVIOR: DIGITALK IMPLEMENTATION AND THE DEEPER MEANING OF IT ALL
- 16 TO ACCESSOR OR NOT TO ACCESSOR
- 17 INHERITANCE: THE REST OF THE STORY
- 18 INHERITANCE: THE REST OF THE STORY (CONT.)
- 19 HELPER METHODS AVOID UNWANTED INHERITANCE
- 20 IT'S NOT JUST THE CASE
- 21 CRC: FINDING OBJECTS THE EASY WAY
- 22 DEATH TO CASE STATEMENTS
- 23 WHERE DO OBJECTS COME FROM?
- 24 PATTERNS AND SOFTWARE DEVELOPMENT
- 25 DISTRIBUTED SMALLTALK
- 26 WHERE DO OBJECTS COME FROM? FROM VARIABLES AND METHODS
- 27 BIRDS, BEES, AND BROWSERS—OBVIOUS SOURCES OF OBJECTS
- 28 USING PATTERNS: DESIGN
- 29 PATTERNS GENERATE ARCHITECTURES
- 30 SIMPLE SMALLTALK TESTING
- 31 ARCHITECTURAL PROTOTYPE: TELEVISION REMOTE CONTROL
- 32 DEMAND LOADING FOR VISUALWORKS
- 33 GARBAGE COLLECTION REVEALED
- 34 WHAT? WHAT HAPPENED TO GARBAGE COLLECTION?
- 35 SUPER + 1
- 36 CLEAN CODE: PIPE DREAM OR STATE OF MIND?
- 37 A MODEST META PROPOSAL
- 38 USES OF VARIABLES: TEMPS
- 39 VARIABLES OF THE WORLD
- 40 PATTERNS 101
- 41 FAREWELL AND A WOOD PILE
- AFTERWORD
- INDEX
Summary
This column is really just an application of Composed Method to deal with inheritance. Now I always try to make my code fragments be real code, no As, Bs, and Cs. You can see why from the example here that is written the other way.
The column is interesting in that it contains some of the first explicit links between patterns. Down at the end it says, “Use Composed Method if necessary to set this pattern up.” I paid considerably more attention to pattern linking when I wrote the pattern book, and I'll probably pay a lot more attention with my next set of patterns.
Patterns in isolation are all very interesting, but it is when they are linked together that they become powerful. It is only then that you can explain a simple solution to a problem, because you know that the rest of the solution was handled by previous patterns or will be handled by future patterns.
The topic of this issue's column on Smalltalk idioms, following the general theme of inheritance, is how to manage the use of super. Several issues back I wrote a column entitled “The Dreaded Super,” in which I catalogued all the legitimate (and otherwise) uses of super in the existing Smalltalk/V and VisualWorks images. I'm still very proud of that column, but a couple of days ago I discovered I had left out one very important technique in dealing with super.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Kent Beck's Guide to Better SmalltalkA Sorted Collection, pp. 195 - 200Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1997