Apr 14, 2017 12:44:33 PM | Creational Design Patterns: Abstract Factory

In this third part of Software Design Pattern series we closely examine the Abstract Factory design pattern, including C# example code.

Moving right along through our Guide to Software Design Patterns, today we're going to take a deeper dive into the next Creational design pattern on the list: the abstract factory. The abstract factory is the final factory pattern we'll be exploring in this series and, perhaps unsurprisingly, it is the most robust and detailed of all three factory patterns we'll be covering. Simply put, the abstract factory allows you to create a factory of factories -- a way to group similar factories together, without knowledge of their underlying classes or behavior.

Throughout this article we'll examine what the abstract factory design pattern is by using a real world illustration, along with a functional C# code example, so let's get started!

In the Real World

As with other factory pattern types, the abstract factory relies heavily on the concept of a real world factory in order to rapidly recreate similar objects, without any knowledge (nor understanding) of what precise steps go into creating a particular product. Sticking with our theme of writing, books, and publication, the real world example of an abstract factory pattern expands on these concepts even further.

For example, imagine we have two authors, Edgar Allan Poe and Charles Darwin, both looking to publish their (arguably) most famous works, The Raven and On the Origin of Species, respectively. Since one is a poet and the other a scientist, the types of work they've created are quite different (poem and research paper). Moreover, given those disparate types of writings, it's unlikely that they'll both be using the same publisher. As it happens, The Raven was first published in 1845 by a periodical called The American Review, while On the Origin of Species was published in 1859 by John Murray, an eclectic English publishing firm.

Since different types of authors produces different kinds of writing -- which are likely to be published by dramatically different publishers -- this is a great use of the abstract factory method. To simplify our comparison, we'll modernize the publisher types a bit and use a blog for publishing poems and a scientific journal for publishing research papers. If we have a poem like The Raven ready to be published, we need an appropriate type of publisher for it, such as a Blog. Similarly, a scientific paper, like On the Origin of Species, might require a scientific journal for publication.

We've now created a relationship, which is the heart of the abstract factory design pattern. Poems now require a blog to publish, while a scientific paper requires a scientific journal to publish. This dependency is what defines the abstract factory, as we'll see in our code below.

How It Works In Code

To illustrate the abstract factory pattern in code, for your convenience, we'll begin by showing the full code example right away. Afterward, we'll dissect the code to see how the abstract factory was created.

using Utility;

namespace Airbrake.DesignPatterns.AbstractFactory
{
class Program
{
static void Main(string[] args)
{
// Create a PoemFactory, generating a Poem book type and a Blog publisher type.
new PoemFactory(author: "Edgar Allan Poe",
title: "The Raven",
publisher: "The American Review");

// Create a ResearchPaperFactory, generating a ResearchPaper book type
// and a ScientificJournal publisher type.
new ResearchPaperFactory(author: "Charles Darwin",
title: "On the Origin of Species",
publisher: "John Murray");
}
}

public interface IBook
{
string Author { get; set; }
string Title { get; set; }
}

public class Poem : IBook
{
public string Author { get; set; }
public string Title { get; set; }
public Poem(string author, string title)
{
Author = author;
Title = title;
Logging.Log($"Made an IBook of type: {this.ToString()}.");
}
}

public class ResearchPaper : IBook
{
public string Author { get; set; }
public string Title { get; set; }
public ResearchPaper(string author, string title)
{
Author = author;
Title = title;
Logging.Log($"Made an IBook of type: {this.ToString()}.");
}
}

public interface IPublisher
{
string Name { get; set; }
}

public class Blog : IPublisher
{
public string Name { get; set; }
public Blog(string name)
{
Name = name;
Logging.Log($"Made an IPublisher of type: {this.ToString()}.");
}
}

public class ScientificJournal : IPublisher
{
public string Name { get; set; }
public ScientificJournal(string name)
{
Name = name;
Logging.Log($"Made an IPublisher of type: {this.ToString()}.");
}
}

public interface IBookFactory
{
IBook MakeBook(string author, string title);
IPublisher MakePublisher(string name);
}

public class PoemFactory : IBookFactory
{
public PoemFactory() { }

public PoemFactory(string author, string title, string publisher)
{
MakeBook(author: author, title: title);
MakePublisher(name: publisher);
Logging.Log($"Made an IBookFactory of type: {this.ToString()}.");
}

public IBook MakeBook(string author, string title)
{
return new Poem(author: author, title: title);
}

public IPublisher MakePublisher(string name)
{
return new Blog(name: name);
}
}

public class ResearchPaperFactory : IBookFactory
{
public ResearchPaperFactory() { }

public ResearchPaperFactory(string author, string title, string publisher)
{
MakeBook(author: author, title: title);
MakePublisher(name: publisher);
Logging.Log($"Made an IBookFactory of type: {this.ToString()}.");
}

public IBook MakeBook(string author, string title)
{
return new ResearchPaper(author: author, title: title);
}

public IPublisher MakePublisher(string name)
{
return new ScientificJournal(name: name);
}
}
}

The first part of our abstract factory is the creation of two unique types of objects; in this case: Books and Publishers. Thus, we begin by defining our unique types of Books:

public interface IBook
{
string Author { get; set; }
string Title { get; set; }
}

public class Poem : IBook
{
public string Author { get; set; }
public string Title { get; set; }
public Poem(string author, string title)
{
Author = author;
Title = title;
Logging.Log($"Made an IBook of type: {this.ToString()}.");
}
}

public class ResearchPaper : IBook
{
public string Author { get; set; }
public string Title { get; set; }
public ResearchPaper(string author, string title)
{
Author = author;
Title = title;
Logging.Log($"Made an IBook of type: {this.ToString()}.");
}
}

Nothing fancy going on here. We've created the IBook interface with a few properties, then we create two unique classes that inherit IBook, Poem and ResearchPaper. Both simply assign values for the Author and Titleproperties, then output the name of the class when initialized. Note: Since we've used it in a few different articles already, I've excluded the Utility namespace and Logging class code, as it's just a convenience for generating output.

Next, we'll follow a similar pattern to create our IPublisher interface, along with two unique classes that inherit from it:

public interface IPublisher
{
string Name { get; set; }
}

public class Blog : IPublisher
{
public string Name { get; set; }
public Blog(string name)
{
Name = name;
Logging.Log($"Made an IPublisher of type: {this.ToString()}.");
}
}

public class ScientificJournal : IPublisher
{
public string Name { get; set; }
public ScientificJournal(string name)
{
Name = name;
Logging.Log($"Made an IPublisher of type: {this.ToString()}.");
}
}

This pattern is exactly the same as when creating our Book type classes, but now we have two unique types of Publishers, Blog and ScientificJournal.

Now we can get to the juicy bits of actually implementing our abstract factory. The key is to create a factory that makes use of both our IBook and IPublisher interfaces. That is accomplished with the IBookFactory interface that is immediately below:]

public interface IBookFactory
{
IBook MakeBook(string author, string title);
IPublisher MakePublisher(string name);
}

public class PoemFactory : IBookFactory
{
public PoemFactory() { }

public PoemFactory(string author, string title, string publisher)
{
MakeBook(author: author, title: title);
MakePublisher(name: publisher);
Logging.Log($"Made an IBookFactory of type: {this.ToString()}.");
}

public IBook MakeBook(string author, string title)
{
return new Poem(author: author, title: title);
}

public IPublisher MakePublisher(string name)
{
return new Blog(name: name);
}
}

public class ResearchPaperFactory : IBookFactory
{
public ResearchPaperFactory() { }

public ResearchPaperFactory(string author, string title, string publisher)
{
MakeBook(author: author, title: title);
MakePublisher(name: publisher);
Logging.Log($"Made an IBookFactory of type: {this.ToString()}.");
}

public IBook MakeBook(string author, string title)
{
return new ResearchPaper(author: author, title: title);
}

public IPublisher MakePublisher(string name)
{
return new ScientificJournal(name: name);
}
}

Once our IBookFactory is defined, we then expand on that to create two unique factory classes, the PoemFactoryand the ResearchPaperFactory. We've given ourselves the option of initializing either an empty version of PoemFactory, or passing parameters to immediately call the MakeBook and MakePublisher methods that were inherited from our IBookFactory interface.

What makes this abstract is that each unique type of factory is able to independently generate and return an appropriate Book type class and Publisher type class, but the factory itself is none the wiser. For example, notice in the PoemFactory.MakeBook() method we're creating a new instance of the Poem class, while the ResearchPaperFactory.MakeBook() method returns a new ResearchPaper instance.

This abstraction allows us to use our factories as follows:

// Create a PoemFactory, generating a Poem book type and a Blog publisher type.
new PoemFactory(author: "Edgar Allan Poe",
title: "The Raven",
publisher: "The American Review");

// Create a ResearchPaperFactory, generating a ResearchPaper book type
// and a ScientificJournal publisher type.
new ResearchPaperFactory(author: "Charles Darwin",
title: "On the Origin of Species",
publisher: "John Murray");

We're able to instantiate a PoemFactory (and pass in some values) without any underlying knowledge of what Bookor Publisher classes are used under the hood, nor how their respective logic works. This is the abstract part of the abstract factory pattern, and the output confirms that we're creating the appropriate types of objects:

Made an IBook of type: Airbrake.DesignPatterns.AbstractFactory.Poem.
Made an IPublisher of type: Airbrake.DesignPatterns.AbstractFactory.Blog.
Made an IBookFactory of type: Airbrake.DesignPatterns.AbstractFactory.PoemFactory.
Made an IBook of type: Airbrake.DesignPatterns.AbstractFactory.ResearchPaper.
Made an IPublisher of type: Airbrake.DesignPatterns.AbstractFactory.ScientificJournal.
Made an IBookFactory of type: Airbrake.DesignPatterns.AbstractFactory.ResearchPaperFactory.

Written By: Frances Banks