Chain of Responsibility Pattern
Author: Deron Eriksson
Description: This Java tutorial describes the chain of responsibility pattern, a behavioral object pattern.
Tutorial created using:
Windows Vista || JDK 1.6.0_11 || Eclipse JEE Ganymede SR1 (Eclipse 3.4.1)
The chain of responsibility pattern is a behavioral object design pattern. In the chain of responsibility pattern, a series of handler objects are chained together to handle a request made by a client object. If the first handler can't handle the request, the request is forwarded to the next handler, and it is passed down the chain until the request reaches a handler that can handle the request or the chain ends. In this pattern, the client is decoupled from the actual handling of the request, since it does not know what class will actually handle the request. In this pattern, a Handler is an interface for handling a request and accessing a handler's successor. A Handler is implemented by a Concrete Handler. The Concrete Handler will handle the request or pass it on to the next Concrete Handler. A Client makes the request to the start of the handler chain. Now, let's look at an example of the chain of responsibility pattern. Rather than an interface, I'll use an abstract base class as the handler so that subclasses can utilize the implemented setSuccessor() method. This abstract class is called PlanetHandler. Concrete handlers that subclass PlanetHandler need to implement the handleRequest() method. PlanetHandler.javapackage com.cakes; public abstract class PlanetHandler { PlanetHandler successor; public void setSuccessor(PlanetHandler successor) { this.successor = successor; } public abstract void handleRequest(PlanetEnum request); } This example will utilize an enum of the planets called PlanetEnum. PlanetEnum.javapackage com.cakes; public enum PlanetEnum { MERCURY, VENUS, EARTH, MARS, JUPITER, SATURN, URANUS, NEPTUNE; } MercuryHandler subclasses PlanetHandler and implements the handleRequest() method. If the request is a PlanetEnum.MERCURY, it will handle the request. Otherwise, the request is passed on to this handler's successor if the successor exists. MercuryHandler.javapackage com.cakes; public class MercuryHandler extends PlanetHandler { public void handleRequest(PlanetEnum request) { if (request == PlanetEnum.MERCURY) { System.out.println("MercuryHandler handles " + request); System.out.println("Mercury is hot.\n"); } else { System.out.println("MercuryHandler doesn't handle " + request); if (successor != null) { successor.handleRequest(request); } } } } VenusHandler is similar to MercuryHandler, except it handles PlanetEnum.VENUS requests. VenusHandler.javapackage com.cakes; public class VenusHandler extends PlanetHandler { public void handleRequest(PlanetEnum request) { if (request == PlanetEnum.VENUS) { System.out.println("VenusHandler handles " + request); System.out.println("Venus is poisonous.\n"); } else { System.out.println("VenusHandler doesn't handle " + request); if (successor != null) { successor.handleRequest(request); } } } } (Continued on page 2) Related Tutorials:
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