Delegation (computing)
In computing or computer programming, delegation refers generally to one entity passing something to another entity,[1] and narrowly to various specific forms of relationships. These include:
- Delegation (object-oriented programming), evaluating a member of one object (the receiver) in the context of another, original object (the sender).
- Delegation pattern, a design pattern implementing this feature.
- Forwarding (object-oriented programming), an often-confused technique where a sending object uses the corresponding member of another object, without the receiving object having any knowledge of the original, sending object.
- Object aggregation or consultation, general term for one object using another.
- Delegation (computer security), one user or process allowing another user or process to use their credentials or permissions.
- Delegate (CLI), a form of type-safe function pointer used by the Common Language Infrastructure (CLI), specifying both a method to call and optionally an object to call the method on.
See also
References
- Barry Wilkinson, Grid Computing: Techniques and Applications (2009), p. 164, ISBN 1420069543.
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