Clean Architecture: Reorder sections

master
rubenwardy 2019-05-31 18:54:30 +01:00
parent 79a522f852
commit 10bf0e31ce
1 changed files with 44 additions and 47 deletions

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@ -18,9 +18,9 @@ meant to be prescriptive, but to instead give you an idea of the possibilities.
There is no one good way of designing a mod, and good mod design is very subjective.
- [Cohesion, Coupling, and Separation of Concerns](#cohesion-coupling-and-separation-of-concerns)
- [Observer](#observer)
- [Model-View-Controller](#model-view-controller)
- [API-View](#api-view)
- [Observer](#observer)
- [Conclusion](#conclusion)
@ -53,6 +53,49 @@ Note that these apply both when thinking about the relationship between mods,
and the relationship between areas inside a mod.
## Observer
A simple way to separate different areas of code is to use the Observer pattern.
Let's take the example of unlocking an achievement when a player first kills a
rare animal. The naïve approach would be to have achievement code in the mob
kill function, checking the mob name and unlocking the award if it matches.
This is a bad idea, however, as it makes the mobs mod coupled to the achievements
code. If you kept on doing this - for example, adding XP to the mob death code -
you could end up with a lot of messy dependencies.
Enter the Observer pattern. Instead of the mymobs mod caring about awards,
the mymobs mod exposes a way for other areas of code to register their
interest in an event and receive data about the event.
```lua
mymobs.registered_on_death = {}
function mymobs.register_on_death(func)
table.insert(mymobs.registered_on_death, func)
end
-- in mob death code
for i=1, #mymobs.registered_on_death do
mymobs.registered_on_death[i](entity, reason)
end
```
Then the other code registers its interest:
```lua
mymobs.register_on_death(function(mob, reason)
if reason.type == "punch" and reason.object and
reason.object:is_player() then
awards.notify_mob_kill(reason.object, mob.name)
end
end)
```
You may be thinking - wait a second, this looks awfully familiar. And you're right!
The Minetest API is heavily Observer-based to stop the engine having to care about
what is listening to something.
## Model-View-Controller
In the next chapter, we will discuss how to automatically test your
@ -199,52 +242,6 @@ as it doesn't use any Minetest APIs - as shown in the
[next chapter](unit_testing.html) and seen in the crafting mod.
## Observer
Reducing coupling may seem hard to do, to begin with, but you'll make a lot of
progress by splitting your code up using a design like the one given above.
It's not always possible to remove the need for one area to communicate with
another, but there are ways to decouple anyway - one example being the Observer
pattern.
Let's take the example of unlocking an achievement when a player first kills a
rare animal. The naïve approach would be to have achievement code in the mob
kill function, checking the mob name and unlocking the award if it matches.
This is a bad idea, however, as it makes the mobs mod coupled to the achievements
code. If you kept on doing this - for example, adding XP to the mob death code -
you could end up with a lot of messy dependencies.
Enter the Observer pattern. Instead of the mymobs mod caring about awards,
the mymobs mod exposes a way for other areas of code to register their
interest in an event and receive data about the event.
```lua
mymobs.registered_on_death = {}
function mymobs.register_on_death(func)
table.insert(mymobs.registered_on_death, func)
end
-- mob death code
for i=1, #mymobs.registered_on_death do
mymobs.registered_on_death[i](entity, reason)
end
```
Then the other code registers its interest:
```lua
mymobs.register_on_death(function(mob, reason)
if reason.type == "punch" and reason.object and
reason.object:is_player() then
awards.notify_mob_kill(reason.object, mob.name)
end
end)
```
You may be thinking - wait a second, this looks awfully familiar. And you're right!
The Minetest API is heavily Observer-based to stop the engine having to care about
what is listening to something.
## Conclusion
Good code design is subjective, and highly depends on the project you're making. As a