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Hands-On Design Patterns with C++

You're reading from   Hands-On Design Patterns with C++ Solve common C++ problems with modern design patterns and build robust applications

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781804611555
Length 626 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Fedor G. Pikus Fedor G. Pikus
Author Profile Icon Fedor G. Pikus
Fedor G. Pikus
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Table of Contents (26) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: Getting Started with C++ Features and Concepts
2. Chapter 1: An Introduction to Inheritance and Polymorphism FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Class and Function Templates 4. Chapter 3: Memory and Ownership 5. Part 2: Common C++ Idioms
6. Chapter 4: Swap – from Simple to Subtle 7. Chapter 5: A Comprehensive Look at RAII 8. Chapter 6: Understanding Type Erasure 9. Chapter 7: SFINAE, Concepts, and Overload Resolution Management 10. Part 3: C++ Design Patterns
11. Chapter 8: The Curiously Recurring Template Pattern 12. Chapter 9: Named Arguments, Method Chaining, and the Builder Pattern 13. Chapter 10: Local Buffer Optimization 14. Chapter 11: ScopeGuard 15. Chapter 12: Friend Factory 16. Chapter 13: Virtual Constructors and Factories 17. Chapter 14: The Template Method Pattern and the Non-Virtual Idiom 18. Part 4: Advanced C++ Design Patterns
19. Chapter 15: Policy-Based Design 20. Chapter 16: Adapters and Decorators 21. Chapter 17: The Visitor Pattern and Multiple Dispatch 22. Chapter 18: Patterns for Concurrency 23. Assessments 24. Index 25. Other Books You May Enjoy

Visiting complex objects

In the last section, we saw how the Visitor pattern allows us to add new operations to the existing hierarchy. In one of the examples, we visited a complex object that contained pointers to other objects. The visitor iterated over these pointers, in a limited way. We are now going to consider the general problem of visiting objects that are composed of other objects, or objects that contain other objects and build up to the demonstration of a working serialization/deserialization solution at the end.

Visiting composite objects

The general idea of visiting complex objects is quite straightforward - when visiting the object itself, we generally do not know all the details of how to handle each component or contained object. But there is something else that does - the visitor for that object type is written specifically to handle that class and nothing else. This observation suggests that the correct way to handle the component objects is to simply visit...

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