Creational Design Patterns
- Design Patterns - Factory Pattern
- Abstract Factory Pattern
- Design Patterns - Singleton Pattern
- Design Patterns - Builder Pattern
- Design Patterns - Prototype Pattern
Structural Design Patterns
- Design Patterns - Adapter Pattern
- Design Patterns - Bridge Pattern
- Design Patterns - Filter Pattern
- Design Patterns - Composite Pattern
- Design Patterns - Decorator Pattern
- Design Patterns - Facade Pattern
- Design Patterns - Flyweight Pattern
- Design Patterns - Proxy Pattern
- Chain of Responsibility Pattern
Behavioral Design Patterns
- Design Patterns - Command Pattern
- Design Patterns - Interpreter Pattern
- Design Patterns - Iterator Pattern
- Design Patterns - Mediator Pattern
- Design Patterns - Memento Pattern
- Design Patterns - Observer Pattern
- Design Patterns - State Pattern
- Design Patterns - Strategy Pattern
- Design Patterns - Template Pattern
- Design Patterns - Visitor Pattern
J2EE Design Patterns
- Design Patterns - Null Object Pattern
- Design Patterns - MVC Pattern
- Business Delegate Pattern
- Composite Entity Pattern
- Data Access Object Pattern
- Front Controller Pattern
- Intercepting Filter Pattern
- Service Locator Pattern
- Transfer Object Pattern
Design Patterns Useful Resources
Design Patterns - State Pattern
In State pattern a class behavior changes based on its state. This type of design pattern comes under behavior pattern.
In State pattern, we create objects which represent various states and a context object whose behavior varies as its state object changes.
Implementation
We are going to create a State interface defining an action and concrete state classes implementing the State interface. Context is a class which carries a State.
StatePatternDemo, our demo class, will use Context and state objects to demonstrate change in Context behavior based on type of state it is in.
Step 1
Create an interface.
State.java
package com.tutorialspoint;
public interface State {
public void doAction(Context context);
}
Step 2
Create concrete classes implementing the same interface.
StartState.java
package com.tutorialspoint;
public class StartState implements State {
public void doAction(Context context) {
System.out.println("Player is in start state");
context.setState(this);
}
public String toString(){
return "Start State";
}
}
StopState.java
package com.tutorialspoint;
public class StopState implements State {
public void doAction(Context context) {
System.out.println("Player is in stop state");
context.setState(this);
}
public String toString(){
return "Stop State";
}
}
Step 3
Create Context Class.
Context.java
package com.tutorialspoint;
public class Context {
private State state;
public Context(){
state = null;
}
public void setState(State state){
this.state = state;
}
public State getState(){
return state;
}
}
Example - Usage of State Pattern
Use the Context to see change in behaviour when State changes.
StatePatternDemo.java
package com.tutorialspoint;
public class StatePatternDemo {
public static void main(String[] args) {
Context context = new Context();
StartState startState = new StartState();
startState.doAction(context);
System.out.println(context.getState().toString());
StopState stopState = new StopState();
stopState.doAction(context);
System.out.println(context.getState().toString());
}
}
interface State {
public void doAction(Context context);
}
class StartState implements State {
public void doAction(Context context) {
System.out.println("Player is in start state");
context.setState(this);
}
public String toString(){
return "Start State";
}
}
class StopState implements State {
public void doAction(Context context) {
System.out.println("Player is in stop state");
context.setState(this);
}
public String toString(){
return "Stop State";
}
}
class Context {
private State state;
public Context(){
state = null;
}
public void setState(State state){
this.state = state;
}
public State getState(){
return state;
}
}
Output
Verify the output.
Player is in start state Start State Player is in stop state Stop State
Advertisements