Adapter pattern
In software engineering, the adapter pattern is a software design pattern (also known as wrapper, an alternative naming shared with the decorator pattern) that allows the interface of an existing class to be used as another interface.[1] It is often used to make existing classes work with others without modifying their source code.
An example is an adapter that converts the interface of a Document Object Model of an XML document into a tree structure that can be displayed.
Overview
The adapter[2] design pattern is one of the twenty-three well-known Gang of Four design patterns that describe how to solve recurring design problems to design flexible and reusable object-oriented software, that is, objects that are easier to implement, change, test, and reuse.
The adapter design pattern solves problems like:[3]
- How can a class be reused that does not have an interface that a client requires?
- How can classes that have incompatible interfaces work together?
- How can an alternative interface be provided for a class?
Often an (already existing) class can't be reused only because its interface doesn't conform to the interface clients require.
The adapter design pattern describes how to solve such problems:
- Define a separate
adapter
class that converts the (incompatible) interface of a class (adaptee
) into another interface (target
) clients require. - Work through an
adapter
to work with (reuse) classes that do not have the required interface.
The key idea in this pattern is to work through a separate adapter
that adapts the interface of an (already existing) class without changing it.
Clients don't know whether they work with a target
class directly or through an adapter
with a class that does not have the target
interface.
See also the UML class diagram below.
Definition
An adapter allows two incompatible interfaces to work together. This is the real-world definition for an adapter. Interfaces may be incompatible, but the inner functionality should suit the need. The adapter design pattern allows otherwise incompatible classes to work together by converting the interface of one class into an interface expected by the clients.
Usage
An adapter can be used when the wrapper must respect a particular interface and must support polymorphic behavior. Alternatively, a decorator makes it possible to add or alter behavior of an interface at run-time, and a facade is used when an easier or simpler interface to an underlying object is desired.[4]
Pattern | Intent |
---|---|
Adapter or wrapper | Converts one interface to another so that it matches what the client is expecting |
Decorator | Dynamically adds responsibility to the interface by wrapping the original code |
Delegation | Support "composition over inheritance" |
Facade | Provides a simplified interface |
Structure
UML class diagram
In the above UML class diagram, the client
class that requires a target
interface cannot reuse the adaptee
class directly because its interface doesn't conform to the target
interface.
Instead, the client
works through an adapter
class that implements the target
interface in terms of adaptee
:
- The
object adapter
way implements thetarget
interface by delegating to anadaptee
object at run-time (adaptee.specificOperation()
). - The
class adapter
way implements thetarget
interface by inheriting from anadaptee
class at compile-time (specificOperation()
).
Object adapter pattern
In this adapter pattern, the adapter contains an instance of the class it wraps. In this situation, the adapter makes calls to the instance of the wrapped object.
Class adapter pattern
This adapter pattern uses multiple polymorphic interfaces implementing or inheriting both the interface that is expected and the interface that is pre-existing. It is typical for the expected interface to be created as a pure interface class, especially in languages such as Java (before JDK 1.8) that do not support multiple inheritance of classes.[1]
Motivation from compile time solution
It is desired for classA
to supply classB
with some data, let us suppose some String
data. A compile time solution is:
classB.setStringData(classA.getStringData());
However, suppose that the format of the string data must be varied. A compile time solution is to use inheritance:
public class Format1ClassA extends ClassA {
@Override
public String getStringData() {
return format(toString());
}
}
and perhaps create the correctly "formatting" object at runtime by means of the factory pattern.
Run-time adapter solution
A solution using "adapters" proceeds as follows:
(i) Define an intermediary "provider" interface, and write an implementation of that provider interface that wraps the source of the data, ClassA
in this example, and outputs the data formatted as appropriate:
public interface StringProvider {
public String getStringData();
}
public class ClassAFormat1 implements StringProvider {
private ClassA classA = null;
public ClassAFormat1(final ClassA a) {
classA = a;
}
public String getStringData() {
return format(classA.getStringData());
}
private String format(final String sourceValue) {
// Manipulate the source string into a format required
// by the object needing the source object's data
return sourceValue.trim();
}
}
(ii) Write an adapter class that returns the specific implementation of the provider:
public class ClassAFormat1Adapter extends Adapter {
public Object adapt(final Object anObject) {
return new ClassAFormat1((ClassA) anObject);
}
}
(iii) Register the adapter
with a global registry, so that the adapter
can be looked up at runtime:
AdapterFactory.getInstance().registerAdapter(ClassA.class, ClassAFormat1Adapter.class, "format1");
(iv) In code, when wishing to transfer data from ClassA
to ClassB
, write:
Adapter adapter =
AdapterFactory.getInstance()
.getAdapterFromTo(ClassA.class, StringProvider.class, "format1");
StringProvider provider = (StringProvider) adapter.adapt(classA);
String string = provider.getStringData();
classB.setStringData(string);
or more concisely:
classB.setStringData(
((StringProvider)
AdapterFactory.getInstance()
.getAdapterFromTo(ClassA.class, StringProvider.class, "format1")
.adapt(classA))
.getStringData());
(v) The advantage can be seen in that, if it is desired to transfer the data in a second format, then look up the different adapter/provider:
Adapter adapter =
AdapterFactory.getInstance()
.getAdapterFromTo(ClassA.class, StringProvider.class, "format2");
(vi) And if it is desired to output the data from ClassA
as, say, image data in Class C
:
Adapter adapter =
AdapterFactory.getInstance()
.getAdapterFromTo(ClassA.class, ImageProvider.class, "format2");
ImageProvider provider = (ImageProvider) adapter.adapt(classA);
classC.setImage(provider.getImage());
(vii) In this way, the use of adapters and providers allows multiple "views" by ClassB
and ClassC
into ClassA
without having to alter the class hierarchy. In general, it permits a mechanism for arbitrary data flows between objects that can be retrofitted to an existing object hierarchy.
Implementation of the adapter pattern
When implementing the adapter pattern, for clarity, one can apply the class name [ClassName]To[Interface]Adapter
to the provider implementation; for example, DAOToProviderAdapter
. It should have a constructor method with an adaptee class variable as a parameter. This parameter will be passed to an instance member of [ClassName]To[Interface]Adapter
. When the clientMethod is called, it will have access to the adaptee instance that allows for accessing the required data of the adaptee and performing operations on that data that generates the desired output.
Java
interface LightningPhone {
void recharge();
void useLightning();
}
interface MicroUsbPhone {
void recharge();
void useMicroUsb();
}
class Iphone implements LightningPhone {
private boolean connector;
@Override
public void useLightning() {
connector = true;
System.out.println("Lightning connected");
}
@Override
public void recharge() {
if (connector) {
System.out.println("Recharge started");
System.out.println("Recharge finished");
} else {
System.out.println("Connect Lightning first");
}
}
}
class Android implements MicroUsbPhone {
private boolean connector;
@Override
public void useMicroUsb() {
connector = true;
System.out.println("MicroUsb connected");
}
@Override
public void recharge() {
if (connector) {
System.out.println("Recharge started");
System.out.println("Recharge finished");
} else {
System.out.println("Connect MicroUsb first");
}
}
}
/* exposing the target interface while wrapping source object */
class LightningToMicroUsbAdapter implements MicroUsbPhone {
private final LightningPhone lightningPhone;
public LightningToMicroUsbAdapter(LightningPhone lightningPhone) {
this.lightningPhone = lightningPhone;
}
@Override
public void useMicroUsb() {
System.out.println("MicroUsb connected");
lightningPhone.useLightning();
}
@Override
public void recharge() {
lightningPhone.recharge();
}
}
public class AdapterDemo {
static void rechargeMicroUsbPhone(MicroUsbPhone phone) {
phone.useMicroUsb();
phone.recharge();
}
static void rechargeLightningPhone(LightningPhone phone) {
phone.useLightning();
phone.recharge();
}
public static void main(String[] args) {
Android android = new Android();
Iphone iPhone = new Iphone();
System.out.println("Recharging android with MicroUsb");
rechargeMicroUsbPhone(android);
System.out.println("Recharging iPhone with Lightning");
rechargeLightningPhone(iPhone);
System.out.println("Recharging iPhone with MicroUsb");
rechargeMicroUsbPhone(new LightningToMicroUsbAdapter (iPhone));
}
}
Output
Recharging android with MicroUsb MicroUsb connected Recharge started Recharge finished Recharging iPhone with Lightning Lightning connected Recharge started Recharge finished Recharging iPhone with MicroUsb MicroUsb connected Lightning connected Recharge started Recharge finished
Python
"""
Adapter pattern example.
"""
from abc import ABCMeta, abstractmethod
NOT_IMPLEMENTED = "You should implement this."
RECHARGE = ["Recharge started.", "Recharge finished."]
POWER_ADAPTERS = {"Android": "MicroUSB", "iPhone": "Lightning"}
CONNECTED = "{} connected."
CONNECT_FIRST = "Connect {} first."
class RechargeTemplate:
__metaclass__ = ABCMeta
@abstractmethod
def recharge(self):
raise NotImplementedError(NOT_IMPLEMENTED)
class FormatIPhone(RechargeTemplate):
@abstractmethod
def use_lightning(self):
raise NotImplementedError(NOT_IMPLEMENTED)
class FormatAndroid(RechargeTemplate):
@abstractmethod
def use_micro_usb(self):
raise NotImplementedError(NOT_IMPLEMENTED)
class IPhone(FormatIPhone):
__name__ = "iPhone"
def __init__(self):
self.connector = False
def use_lightning(self):
self.connector = True
print(CONNECTED.format(POWER_ADAPTERS[self.__name__]))
def recharge(self):
if self.connector:
for state in RECHARGE:
print(state)
else:
print(CONNECT_FIRST.format(POWER_ADAPTERS[self.__name__]))
class Android(FormatAndroid):
__name__ = "Android"
def __init__(self):
self.connector = False
def use_micro_usb(self):
self.connector = True
print(CONNECTED.format(POWER_ADAPTERS[self.__name__]))
def recharge(self):
if self.connector:
for state in RECHARGE:
print(state)
else:
print(CONNECT_FIRST.format(POWER_ADAPTERS[self.__name__]))
class IPhoneAdapter(FormatAndroid):
def __init__(self, mobile):
self.mobile = mobile
def recharge(self):
self.mobile.recharge()
def use_micro_usb(self):
print(CONNECTED.format(POWER_ADAPTERS["Android"]))
self.mobile.use_lightning()
class AndroidRecharger:
def __init__(self):
self.phone = Android()
self.phone.use_micro_usb()
self.phone.recharge()
class IPhoneMicroUSBRecharger:
def __init__(self):
self.phone = IPhone()
self.phone_adapter = IPhoneAdapter(self.phone)
self.phone_adapter.use_micro_usb()
self.phone_adapter.recharge()
class IPhoneRecharger:
def __init__(self):
self.phone = IPhone()
self.phone.use_lightning()
self.phone.recharge()
print("Recharging Android with MicroUSB recharger.")
AndroidRecharger()
print()
print("Recharging iPhone with MicroUSB using adapter pattern.")
IPhoneMicroUSBRecharger()
print()
print("Recharging iPhone with iPhone recharger.")
IPhoneRecharger()
See also
- Adapter Java Design Patterns - Adapter
- Delegation, strongly relevant to the object adapter pattern.
- Dependency inversion principle, which can be thought of as applying the adapter pattern, when the high-level class defines its own (adapter) interface to the low-level module (implemented by an adaptee class).
- Ports and adapters architecture
- Shim
- Wrapper function
- Wrapper library
References
- Freeman, Eric; Freeman, Elisabeth; Sierra, Kathy; Bates, Bert (2004). Head First Design Patterns. O'Reilly Media. p. 244. ISBN 978-0-596-00712-6. OCLC 809772256. Archived from the original (paperback) on 2013-05-04. Retrieved 2013-04-30.
- Gamma, Erich; Helm, Richard; Johnson, Ralph; Vlissides, John (1994). Design Patterns: Elements of Reusable Object-Oriented Software. Addison Wesley. pp. 139ff. ISBN 0-201-63361-2.
- "The Adapter design pattern - Problem, Solution, and Applicability". w3sDesign.com. Retrieved 2017-08-12.
- Freeman, Eric; Freeman, Elisabeth; Sierra, Kathy; Bates, Bert (2004). Hendrickson, Mike; Loukides, Mike (eds.). Head First Design Patterns (paperback). 1. O'Reilly Media. pp. 243, 252, 258, 260. ISBN 978-0-596-00712-6. Retrieved 2012-07-02.
- "The Adapter design pattern - Structure and Collaboration". w3sDesign.com. Retrieved 2017-08-12.
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