Single-serving visitor pattern
In computer programming, the single-serving visitor pattern is a design pattern. Its intent is to optimise the implementation of a visitor that is allocated, used only once, and then deleted (which is the case of most visitors).
Applicability
The single-serving visitor pattern should be used when visitors do not need to remain in memory. This is often the case when visiting a hierarchy of objects (such as when the visitor pattern is used together with the composite pattern) to perform a single task on it, for example counting the number of cameras in a 3D scene.
The regular visitor pattern should be used when the visitor must remain in memory. This occurs when the visitor is configured with a number of parameters that must be kept in memory for a later use of the visitor (for example, for storing the rendering options of a 3D scene renderer).
However, if there should be only one instance of such a visitor in a whole program, it can be a good idea to implement it both as a single-serving visitor and as a singleton. In doing so, it is ensured that the single-serving visitor can be called later with its parameters unchanged (in this particular case "single-serving visitor" is an abuse of language since the visitor can be used several times).
Usage examples
The single-serving visitor is called through the intermediate of static methods.
- Without parameters:
Element* elem; SingleServingVisitor::apply_to(elem);
- With parameters:
Element* elem; TYPE param1, param2; SingleServingVisitor::apply_to(elem, param1, param2);
- Implementation as a singleton:
Element* elem; TYPE param1, param2; SingleServingVisitor::set_param1(param1); SingleServingVisitor::set_param2(param2); SingleServingVisitor::apply_to(elem);
Consequences
Pros
- No "zombie" objects. With a single-serving visitor, it is ensured that visitors are allocated when needed and destroyed once useless.
- A simpler interface than visitor. The visitor is created, used and free by the sole call of the apply_to static method.
Cons
- Repeated allocation. At each call of the apply_to method, a single-serving visitor is created then discarded, which is time-consuming. In contrast, the singleton only performs one allocation.
Implementation (in C++)
Basic implementation (without parameters)
// Declaration
class Element;
class ElementA;
class ElementB;
class SingleServingVisitor;
... // Same as with the [[visitor pattern]].
// Definition
class SingleServingVisitor {
protected:
SingleServingVisitor();
public:
~SingleServingVisitor();
static void apply_to(Element*);
virtual void visit_ElementA(ElementA*) = 0;
virtual void visit_ElementB(ElementB*) = 0;
}
// Implementation
void SingleServingVisitor::apply_to(Element* elem)
{
SingleServingVisitor ssv;
elem.accept(ssv);
}
Passing parameters
If the single-serving visitor has to be initialised, the parameters have to be passed through the static method:
void SingleServingVisitor::apply_to(Element* elem, TYPE param1, TYPE param2, ...)
{
SingleServingVisitor ssv(param1, param2, ...);
elem.accept(&ssv);
}
Implementation as a singleton
This implementation ensures:
- that there is at most one instance of the single-serving visitor
- that the visitor can be accessed later
// Definition
class SingleServingVisitor {
protected:
static SingleServingVisitor* instance_;
TYPE param1_;
TYPE param2_;
SingleServingVisitor();
static SingleServingVisitor* get_instance();
// Note: get_instance method does not need to be public
public:
~SingleServingVisitor();
static void apply_to(Element*);
// static methods to access parameters
static void set_param1(TYPE);
static void set_param2(TYPE);
virtual void visit_ElementA(ElementA*) = 0;
virtual void visit_ElementB(ElementB*) = 0;
}
// Implementation
SingleServingVisitor* SingleServingVisitor::instance_ = NULL;
SingleServingVisitor* SingleServingVisitor::get_instance()
{
if (this->instance_ == NULL)
this->instance_ = new SingleServingVisitor();
return this->instance_;
}
void SingleServingVisitor::apply_to(Element* elem)
{
elem->accept(get_instance());
}
void SingleServingVisitor::set_param1(TYPE param1)
{
getInstance()->param1_ = param1;
}
void SingleServingVisitor::set_param2(TYPE param2)
{
getInstance()->param2_ = param2;
}
Related patterns
- Visitor pattern, from which this pattern derives
- Composite pattern: single-serving visitor is often applied to hierarchies of elements
- Singleton pattern