Design patterns inspired by functional programming concepts can advance object-oriented design. This thesis promotes the idea that concepts from the world of functional programming can be captured with design pattern descriptions. These can then be used to benefit from functional programming concepts with ordinary object-oriented languages. The functional patterns are evaluated for their impact on language design and a new approach to a dual-paradigm language is presented.

Content Description

Abstract

Table of Contents

I have obtained permission from the publisher to distribute the book electronically free of charge. Download a copy of the pdf file without the copyrighted pictures by M. C. Escher. You may still be able to get a printed copy with the pictures. The Portland Pattern Repository features some pages written by others about this work.

Content Description

Pattern Description Function Object Black-box behavior parameterisation Lazy Object Evaluation-by-need semantics Value Object Immutable values Void Value Abandoning null references Transfold Combining internal & external iteration Translator Homomorphic mapping with multi-dispatch functions

This book integrates the vital areas of object-orientation, functional programming, design patterns, and language design. The most important concepts from functional programming are captured with six design patterns.

These patterns can be used with any object-oriented language to advance software design. The patterns form a system, i.e., a collaborating set of patterns. In their "Related Patterns" sections the patterns refer to each other and to many other published design patterns.

Each of the relevant areas (object-orientation, functional programming, design patterns) is introduced in the first part of the book. This part also compares the functional and object-oriented paradigms both in terms of concepts and on a calculus level.

The second part presents the functional pattern system. This system should be beneficial to software practitioners since it integrates the functional paradigm into object-oriented software design. Hence, advantages which have been primarily available in functional languages can be used in object-oriented languages as well. Even when some functional concepts have been partially established in object-oriented software practice already, they can now be understood as specialized uses of more general functional patterns.

This practical aspect is complemented by a theoretical account of multi-paradigm language design. An evaluation of the pattern system for its implications on language design in the third part is concluded by proposing a new distribution of responsibilities between languages and their environments.

The book uses the Eiffel programming language to illustrate the patterns with running sample code. It includes a critical review of the Eiffel language in terms of its suitability as a functional pattern implementation language.



Abstract

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Solution

Contribution

Feasibility

Software production

Language Design

Design patterns inspired by functional programming concepts can advance object-oriented design.The object-oriented paradigm has undoubtfully raised our ability to design and maintain large complex software systems. However, it does not seem to have meet the high expectations concerning reuse and ease of evolution which have been promoted ever since its commercial success. There are many potential reasons for the above observation such as unqualified staff, immature languages, inadequate methodologies, inappropriate business processes, etc. The view presented here is that although the object-oriented paradigm is a powerful basis, it is incomplete in its inherent concepts and therefore restricts the design space to inappropriate solutions. It is assumed that both software development and language design are restrained from achieving their full potential when restricted to a purely object-oriented world view.Since the complementary paradigm to object-orientation is represented by functional programming, I investigate high-level, well-known to work functional concepts and examine their suitability to enhance object-oriented design. I explore the software engineering relevance of each concept and present its intent, applicability, implementation, and consequences in the literate form of a design pattern. My approach clearly motivates functional techniques for object-oriented design from a software engineering point of view. This is different to the usual procedure of designing a new language with an "ad-hoc" conglomeration of functional and object-oriented features. The latter case requires excellence in language design and makes it hard to find out and evaluate uses of the new language. In contrast, design patterns are already widely used to improve design. As functional concepts constitute a powerful paradigm by themselves, it is more than suggestive to assume that design patterns expressing successful functional concepts will enhance the object-oriented paradigm with new capabilities.I demonstrate the feasibility of using functional techniques in object-oriented designs which are to be implemented by ordinary object-oriented programming languages. This is done at the level of a calculus comparison and in concrete design pattern implementation descriptions. I demonstrate synergetic effects caused by concept integration, which together with the advantages of functional patterns, thus, show the utility of the approach.Object-oriented practitioners hopefully will use the names of functional design patterns as a vocabulary to discuss solutions in a new design space. I present a system of patterns which are connected by relations that describe how individual patterns may interact and collaborate with each other. This system, consisting of state-of-the-art mini-architectures, may allow thinking and designing beyond restrictions imposed by a dogmatic object-oriented approach. As a result, the quality of software is hoped to improve.Using functional patterns for object-oriented design can be regarded as dual-paradigm design. In this light, functional design patterns appear as language idioms that lift an object-oriented language to a dual paradigm implementation language. It is very instructive to verify how well an object-oriented language supports the implementation of these idioms, since limiting properties are expected to interfere in other attempts to produce flexible and maintainable software as well. Unless one is restricted to use a certain existing language, it is, however, only natural to consider direct language support in order to avoid the repetitive implementation of these idioms. A holistic language that encompasses both object-oriented and functional paradigms should provide more ease of use, increased safety, better initial execution efficiency, and higher optimization potential. I consider each presented design pattern for its contribution to language constructs that support a dual paradigm language. The software engineering considerations, contained in each design pattern description, help to avoid "featurism"' in favor of conceptually founded language principles. Ultimately, impulses initiated by the functional pattern system lead to a reevaluation of the role distribution between a programming language and its associated environment. The resulting language design based on the notion of hierarchical tiles allows transcending the limitations of each paradigm by providing the optimal paradigm view on demand.There is also a german extended abstract (8 pages) which has no english equivalent. The book itself is written in English.