How to model a domain when you have a base class and 2 classes extending this base class and only one of derived class has a relationship with another object.
Example:
public abstract class Base
{
public abstract void method();
}
public class1 extends Base
{
public void method()
{
do some stuff
}
}
public class2 extends Base
{
private Class3 class3;
public void method()
{
do other stuff
}
public Class3 getClass3(){...}
public void setClass3(Class3 class3){...}
}
Is this model breaking Liskov principle? I think so because of this relation with class3, so we have to figure out how to model without this relation or to move this relation to Base. If I have a part of program that deal with Class2 to handle the relation whith Class3 I can't work with base class without cast to class2.
Is this thought right?
Clarifying...
Let's think in learning model. We have Courses and CourseClasses. We can also have a online courses and presencial courses. In presencial courses we may face with cost of this training. So costs only make sense to presencial environment. CourseClasses could have range dates or quatitative dates.
Today I have this model:
Course
{
...
}
public abstract class CourseClass
{
private Course course;
// getter and setter to course
public abstract Enrollment enroll(Person student);
}
public class QuantitativeCourseClass
{
public Enrollment enroll(Person student)
{
// enroll for quantitative
}
}
public class RangeCourseClass
{
public Enrollment enroll(Person student)
{
// enroll for range
}
}
Now I have to deal with costs and till this moment presencial course isn't important to me but now, cost only make sense to presencial enviroment.
My problem is: I need to deal with CourseClass object in cost module because I need some stuff of courseClass, but the relationship of cost is with RangeCourseClass because QuantitativeCourseClass don't make sense to prensecial environment.
The question about liskov is about how to convence my team to make some modifications in this model.
if class3 has nothing to do with base, then it should not be in the base. You can't "break" LSP, since the compiler enforces it. downcasting is not something that is preferred, but doing so doesn't break LSP.
The purpose of inheritence is to have an "is-a" relationship. A cat is-a(n) animal. A toyota is-a car.
What you're talking about is moving the toyota emblem to the car class just because you want to make things easier. That's not good design at all.
In short, it's worse design to move things to the base class than it is to downcast to the specific class.
I think you have mixed up the direction of LSP (Liskov Substitution Principle): LSP is (strong) behavioral subtyping, not strong behavioral supertyping. So LSP is not working against your example, but for your example:
Is this model breaking Liskov principle? I think so because of this
relation with class3, so we have to figure out how to model without
this relation or to move this relation to Base. If I have a part of
program that deal with Class2 to handle the relation with Class3 I
can't work with base class without cast to class2.
Your model is not breaking LSP. If you have a part of program that uses some variable var that deals specifically with Class2 (i.e. parts not present in Base), you need to declare var to be of Class2. So no downcast is necessary. And LSP guarantees that var behaves as Base, too, so no explicit upcast is necessary, either.
As i understand, you can not view the problem without knowing the problem aspects (geometry, for example). So, i can not understand meaning of your architecture. For example, the famous LSP violation Example:
Square:Rectangle -it looks fine, when it stand in "side". But, when you start use and you put some functions around, you can see the problem.
When programming, we usually use some type-casting operations.
When the casting happens on the objects "on the same level", it feels ok. But when it happens on the ojects "on the different levels"(mainly between father and son), it feels weird.
Considering this:
Class Son extends Father
WhenSon s = (Son)father;, it's absolutely unreasonable. Because a "Son" is not a "Father" anymore, "Son" may grow up with some new properties "Father" doesn't have, the casting operation makes these properties unknown.
On the other hand, Father f = (Father)son seems reasonable, but according to LSP
"An instance of a derived should be able to replace any instance of its superclass"
A "Son" can do anything his "Father" can, so the casting operation seems useless.
So can i say that these casting operations are agaisnt OO design principle but necessary?
Casting objects in OOP is usually the product of either class inheritance or interface inheritance. One has to always remember that class inheritance denotes an "is a" relationship, and interface inheritance denotes a "has a" relationship.
Let's go over to your example: Class Son extends Father doesn't sound like a reasonable abstraction, since every male person is a son, but not all of them will be a father. In fact, the opposite might be more applicable: Class Father extends Son because every father is always someone's son.
On the other hand, we could just ditch this whole abstraction and say that we have, instead, a Class Person that can either be a male or a female, a mother or a father, and so on. Each person will have an attribute containing collection of Person with name Children.
In this abstraction, a Person will only be considered a Father if its gender is male and if Person.Children.Count > 0. This is much simpler than defining a Father class in and by itself.
I find questions like these always interesting and it lends itself to some kind of debate I think :)
Here are my thoughts.
In class design I would in this case create a class of Person
class Person
{
public bool IsFather { get; set; } // this variable will change depending on the count of children
public List<Person> children { get; set; }
}
When I create a derived class, the class should be a specialized person and in the case of Father and Son, I wouldn't create a Father class and a Son class.
You've got a bad example of inheritance.
A better one could be
Class Person
{
public void walk();
}
Class Man extends Person
{
public void shaveBeard();
}
Inheritance is the way to represent an is a relationship; e.g. "a Man is a Person".
Using the Objects
Either of these lines is OK.
Person p = new Person();
Person m = new Man();
It is fine to call p.walk on both. However to call the shavebeard() method, m has to be a Man object. For reasons of type safety, you have to cast it to a Man object; e.g. (Man) m.shaveBeard(); The cast here will fail, so it's best to check that the variable refers to an instance of Man:
if(m instanceof Man)
{
(Man) m.shaveBeard();
}
Neither seem reasonable to me. What seems more plausible:
Son s = (Son)person //Valid
Father f = (Father)person //Valid
Here's a hint: the Class on the left hand side is the superclass and that on the right side is the subclass so if we have this:
Object p = new Student(); //is correct
Student s = new Object() //is wrong...it's like saying that every Object is a student..
Care must be considered when doing explicit casting as it may look correct but might not work as expected. You can't instantiate your father's private property to yourself.
What is the difference between association, aggregation, and composition?
Please explain in terms of implementation.
For two objects, Foo and Bar the relationships can be defined
Association - I have a relationship with an object. Foo uses Bar
public class Foo {
private Bar bar;
};
NB: See Fowler's definition - the key is that Bar is semantically related to Foo rather than just a dependency (like an int or string).
Composition - I own an object and I am responsible for its lifetime. When Foo dies, so does Bar
public class Foo {
private Bar bar = new Bar();
}
Aggregation - I have an object which I've borrowed from someone else. When Foo dies, Bar may live on.
public class Foo {
private Bar bar;
Foo(Bar bar) {
this.bar = bar;
}
}
I know this question is tagged as C# but the concepts are pretty generic questions like this redirect here. So I am going to provide my point of view here (a bit biased from java point of view where I am more comfortable).
When we think of Object-oriented nature we always think of Objects, class (objects blueprints) and the relationship between them. Objects are related and interact with each other via methods. In other words the object of one class may use services/methods provided by the object of another class. This kind of relationship is termed as association..
Aggregation and Composition are subsets of association meaning they are specific cases of association.
In both aggregation and composition object of one class "owns" object of another class.
But there is a subtle difference. In Composition the object of class that is owned by the object of it's owning class cannot live on it's own(Also called "death relationship"). It will always live as a part of it's owning object where as in Aggregation the dependent object is standalone and can exist even if the object of owning class is dead.
So in composition if owning object is garbage collected the owned object will also be which is not the case in aggregation.
Confused?
Composition Example : Consider the example of a Car and an engine that is very specific to that car (meaning it cannot be used in any other car). This type of relationship between Car and SpecificEngine class is called Composition. An object of the Car class cannot exist without an object of SpecificEngine class and object of SpecificEngine has no significance without Car class. To put in simple words Car class solely "owns" the SpecificEngine class.
Aggregation Example : Now consider class Car and class Wheel. Car needs a Wheel object to function. Meaning the Car object owns the Wheel object but we cannot say the Wheel object has no significance without the Car Object. It can very well be used in a Bike, Truck or different Cars Object.
Summing it up -
To sum it up association is a very generic term used to represent when a class uses the functionalities provided by another class. We say it's composition if one parent class object owns another child class object and that child class object cannot meaningfully exist without the parent class object. If it can then it is called Aggregation.
More details here.
I am the author of http://opensourceforgeeks.blogspot.in and have added a link above to the relevant post for more context.
Association is generalized concept of relations. It includes both Composition and Aggregation.
Composition(mixture) is a way to wrap simple objects or data types into a single unit. Compositions are a critical building block of many basic data structures
Aggregation(The formation of a number of things into a cluster) differs from ordinary composition in that it does not imply ownership. In composition, when the owning object is destroyed, so are the contained objects. In aggregation, this is not necessarily true.
Trick to remember the difference :
"Has-A": Aggregation
"Part-Of": comPOsitoin
"Is-a": Inheritance
context
Aggregation
Composition
Life time
objects have their own lifetime and there is no owner
controlled by whole or parent that owns it
Scope
parent objects and child objects are independent
parent object also means the death of its children.
Relationship
Has-a
Part-of
Strength
weak relationship
strong relationship.
Real-life example
Car and Driver
Car and wheels
Now let observe the following image
Analogy:
Composition: The following picture is image composition i.e. using individual images making one image.
Aggregation : collection of image in single location
For example, A university owns various departments, and each department has a number of professors. If the university closes, the departments will no longer exist, but the professors in those departments will continue to exist. Therefore, a University can be seen as a composition of departments, whereas departments have an aggregation of professors. In addition, a Professor could work in more than one department, but a department could not be part of more than one university.
Dependency (references)
It means there is no conceptual link between two objects. e.g. EnrollmentService object references Student & Course objects (as method parameters or return types)
public class EnrollmentService {
public void enroll(Student s, Course c){}
}
Association (has-a)
It means there is almost always a link between objects (they are associated).
Order object has a Customer object
public class Order {
private Customer customer
}
Aggregation (has-a + whole-part)
Special kind of association where there is whole-part relation between two objects. they might live without each other though.
public class PlayList {
private List<Song> songs;
}
OR
public class Computer {
private Monitor monitor;
}
Note: the trickiest part is to distinguish aggregation from normal association. Honestly, I think this is open to different interpretations.
Composition (has-a + whole-part + ownership)
Special kind of aggregation. An Apartment is composed of some Rooms. A Room cannot exist without an Apartment. when an apartment is deleted, all associated rooms are deleted as well.
public class Apartment{
private Room bedroom;
public Apartment() {
bedroom = new Room();
}
}
From a post by Robert Martin in comp.object:
Association represents the ability of one instance to send a message to another instance. This is typically implemented with a pointer or reference instance variable, although it might also be implemented as a method argument, or the creation of a local variable.
//[Example:]
//|A|----------->|B|
class A
{
private:
B* itsB;
};
Aggregation [...] is the typical whole/part relationship. This is exactly the same as an association with the exception that instances cannot have cyclic aggregation relationships (i.e. a part cannot contain its whole).
//[Example:]
//|Node|<>-------->|Node|
class Node
{
private:
vector<Node*> itsNodes;
};
The fact that this is aggregation means that the instances of Node cannot form a cycle. Thus, this is a Tree of Nodes not a graph of Nodes.
Composition [...] is exactly like Aggregation except that the lifetime of the 'part' is controlled by the 'whole'. This control may be direct or transitive. That is, the 'whole' may take direct responsibility for creating or destroying the 'part', or it may accept an already created part, and later pass it on to some other whole that assumes responsibility for it.
//[Example:]
//|Car|<#>-------->|Carburetor|
class Car
{
public:
virtual ~Car() {delete itsCarb;}
private:
Carburetor* itsCarb
};
As others said, an association is a relationship between objects, aggregation and composition are types of association.
From an implementation point of view, an aggregation is obtained by having a class member by reference. For example, if class A aggregates an object of class B, you'll have something like this (in C++):
class A {
B & element;
// or B * element;
};
The semantics of aggregation is that when an object A is destroyed, the B object it is storing will still exists. When using composition, you have a stronger relationship, usually by storing the member by value:
class A {
B element;
};
Here, when an A object is destroyed, the B object it contains will be destroyed too. The easiest way to achieve this is by storing the member by value, but you could also use some smart pointer, or delete the member in the destructor:
class A {
std::auto_ptr<B> element;
};
class A {
B * element;
~A() {
delete B;
}
};
The important point is that in a composition, the container object owns the contained one, whereas in aggregation, it references it.
It's amazing how much confusion exists about the distinction between the three relationship concepts association, aggregation and composition.
Notice that the terms aggregation and composition have been used in the C++ community, probably for some time before they have been defined as special cases of association in UML Class Diagrams.
The main problem is the widespread and ongoing misunderstanding (even among expert software developers) that the concept of composition implies a life-cycle dependency between the whole and its parts such that the parts cannot exist without the whole, ignoring the fact that there are also cases of part-whole-associations with non-shareable parts where the parts can be detached from, and survive the destruction of, the whole.
As far as I can see, this confusion has two roots:
In the C++ community, the term "aggregation" was used in the sense of a class defining an attribute for referencing objects of another independent class (see, e.g., [1]), which is the sense of association in UML Class Diagrams. The term "composition" was used for classes that define component objects for their objects, such that on destruction of the composite object, these component objects are being destroyed as well.
In UML Class Diagrams, both "aggregation" and "composition" have been defined as special cases of associations representing part-whole relationships (which have been discussed in philosophy for a long time). In their definitions, the distinction between an "aggregation" and a "composition" is based on the fact if it allows sharing a part between two or more wholes. They define "compositions" as having non-shareable (exclusive) parts, while "aggregations" may share their parts. In addition they say something like the following: very often, but not in all cases, compositions come with a life-cycle dependency between the whole and its parts such that the parts cannot exist without the whole.
Thus, while UML has put the terms "aggregation" and "composition" in the right context (of part-whole relationships), they have not managed to define them in a clear and unambiguous manner, capturing the intuitions of developers. However, this is not surprising because there are so many different properties (and implementation nuances) these relationships can have, and developers do not agree on how to implement them.
See also my extended answer to the SO question of Apr 2009 listed below.
And the property that was assumed to define "composition" between OOP objects in the C++ community (and this belief is still widely held): the run-time life-cycle dependency between the two related objects (the composite and its component), is not really characteristic for "composition" because we can have such dependencies due to referential integrity also in other types of associations.
For instance, the following code pattern for "composition" was proposed in an SO answer:
final class Car {
private final Engine engine;
Car(EngineSpecs specs) {
engine = new Engine(specs);
}
void move() {
engine.work();
}
}
The respondent claimed that it would be characteristic for "composition" that no other class could reference/know the component. However, this is certainly not true for all possible cases of "composition". In particular, in the case of a car's engine, the maker of the car, possibly implemented with the help of another class, may have to reference the engine for being able to contact the car's owner whenever there is an issue with it.
[1] http://www.learncpp.com/cpp-tutorial/103-aggregation/
Appendix - Incomplete list of repeatedly asked questions about composition versus aggregation on StackOverflow
[Apr 2009]
Aggregation versus Composition [closed as primarily opinion-based by]
[Apr 2009]
What is the difference between Composition and Association relationship?
[May 2009]
Difference between association, aggregation and composition
[May 2009]
What is the difference between composition and aggregation? [duplicate]
[Oct 2009]
What is the difference between aggregation, composition and dependency? [marked as duplicate]
[Nov 2010]
Association vs. Aggregation [marked as duplicate]
[Aug 2012]
Implementation difference between Aggregation and Composition in Java
[Feb 2015]
UML - association or aggregation (simple code snippets)
Association
Association represents the relationship between two classes.It can be unidirectional(one way) or bidirectional(two way)
for example:
unidirectional
Customer places orders
bidirectional
A is married to B
B is married to A
Aggregation
Aggregation is a kind of association.But with specific features.Aggregation is the relationship in one larger "whole" class contains one or more smaller "parts" classes.Conversely, a smaller "part" class is a part of "whole" larger class.
for example:
club has members
A club("whole") is made up of several club members("parts").Member have life to outside the club. If the club("whole") were to die, members("parts") would not die with it. Because member can belong to multiple clubs("whole").
Composition
This is a stronger form of aggregation."Whole" is responsible for the creation or destruction of its "parts"
For example:
A school has departments
In this case school("whole") were to die, department("parts") would die with it.
Because each part can belong to only one "whole".
It's important to understand why we should even bother with using more than once relationship line. The most obvious reason is to describe parent-child relationship between classes (when parent deleted all its child’s are deleted as a result), but more impotently, we want to distinguish between simple association and composition in order to place implicit restrictions on the visibility and propagation of changes to the related classes, a matter which plays an important role in understanding and reducing system complexity.
Association
The most abstract way to describe static relationship between classes is using the Association link, which simply states that there is some kind of a link or a dependency between two classes or more.
Weak Association
ClassA may be linked to ClassB in order to show that one of its methods includes parameter of ClassB instance, or returns instance of ClassB.
Strong Association
ClassA may also be linked to ClassB in order to show that it holds a reference to ClassB instance.
Aggregation (Shared Association)
In cases where there’s a part-of relationship between ClassA (whole) and ClassB (part), we can be more specific and use the aggregation link instead of the association link, highlighting that ClassB can also be aggregated by other classes in the application (therefore aggregation is also known as shared association).
It’s important to note that the aggregation link doesn’t state in any way that ClassA owns ClassB nor that there’s a parent-child relationship (when parent deleted all its child’s are being deleted as a result) between the two. Actually, quite the opposite! The aggregation link usually used to stress the point that ClassA is not the exclusive container of ClassB, as in fact ClassB has another container.
Aggregation v.s. Association
The association link can replace the aggregation link in every situation, while aggregation cannot replace association in situations where there’s only a ‘weak link’ between the classes, i.e. ClassA has method/s that contain parameter of ClassB but ClassA doesn’t hold reference to ClassB instance.
Martin Fowler suggest that the aggregation link should not be used at all because it has no added value and it disturb consistency, Quoting Jim Rumbaugh "Think of it as a modeling placebo".
Composition (Not-Shared Association)
We should be more specific and use the composition link in cases where in addition to the part-of relationship between ClassA and ClassB - there’s a strong lifecycle dependency between the two, meaning that when ClassA is deleted then ClassB is also deleted as a result
The composition link shows that a class (container, whole) has exclusive ownership over other class/s (parts), meaning that the container object and its parts constitute a parent-child/s relationship.
Unlike association and aggregation, when using the composition relationship, the composed class cannot appear as a return type or parameter type of the composite class. Thus, changes to the composed class cannot propagate to the rest of the system. Consequently, usage of composition limits complexity growth as the system grows.
Measuring system complexity
System complexity can be measured simply by looking at a UML class diagram and evaluating the association, aggregation, and composition relationship lines. The way to measure complexity is to determine how many classes can be affected by changing a particular class. If class A exposes class B, then any given class that uses class A can theoretically be affected by changes to class B. The sum of the number of potentially affected classes for every class in the system is the total system complexity.
You can read more on my blog:
http://aviadezra.blogspot.com/2009/05/uml-association-aggregation-composition.html
Composition (If you remove "whole", “part” is also removed automatically– “Ownership”)
Create objects of your existing class inside the new class. This is called composition because the new class is composed of objects of existing classes.
Typically use normal member variables.
Can use pointer values if the composition class automatically handles allocation/deallocation responsible for creation/destruction of subclasses.
Composition in C++
#include <iostream>
using namespace std;
/********************** Engine Class ******************/
class Engine
{
int nEngineNumber;
public:
Engine(int nEngineNo);
~Engine(void);
};
Engine::Engine(int nEngineNo)
{
cout<<" Engine :: Constructor " <<endl;
}
Engine::~Engine(void)
{
cout<<" Engine :: Destructor " <<endl;
}
/********************** Car Class ******************/
class Car
{
int nCarColorNumber;
int nCarModelNumber;
Engine objEngine;
public:
Car (int, int,int);
~Car(void);
};
Car::Car(int nModelNo,int nColorNo, int nEngineNo):
nCarModelNumber(nModelNo),nCarColorNumber(nColorNo),objEngine(nEngineNo)
{
cout<<" Car :: Constructor " <<endl;
}
Car::~Car(void)
{
cout<<" Car :: Destructor " <<endl;
Car
Engine
Figure 1 : Composition
}
/********************** Bus Class ******************/
class Bus
{
int nBusColorNumber;
int nBusModelNumber;
Engine* ptrEngine;
public:
Bus(int,int,int);
~Bus(void);
};
Bus::Bus(int nModelNo,int nColorNo, int nEngineNo):
nBusModelNumber(nModelNo),nBusColorNumber(nColorNo)
{
ptrEngine = new Engine(nEngineNo);
cout<<" Bus :: Constructor " <<endl;
}
Bus::~Bus(void)
{
cout<<" Bus :: Destructor " <<endl;
delete ptrEngine;
}
/********************** Main Function ******************/
int main()
{
freopen ("InstallationDump.Log", "w", stdout);
cout<<"--------------- Start Of Program --------------------"<<endl;
// Composition using simple Engine in a car object
{
cout<<"------------- Inside Car Block ------------------"<<endl;
Car objCar (1, 2,3);
}
cout<<"------------- Out of Car Block ------------------"<<endl;
// Composition using pointer of Engine in a Bus object
{
cout<<"------------- Inside Bus Block ------------------"<<endl;
Bus objBus(11, 22,33);
}
cout<<"------------- Out of Bus Block ------------------"<<endl;
cout<<"--------------- End Of Program --------------------"<<endl;
fclose (stdout);
}
Output
--------------- Start Of Program --------------------
------------- Inside Car Block ------------------
Engine :: Constructor
Car :: Constructor
Car :: Destructor
Engine :: Destructor
------------- Out of Car Block ------------------
------------- Inside Bus Block ------------------
Engine :: Constructor
Bus :: Constructor
Bus :: Destructor
Engine :: Destructor
------------- Out of Bus Block ------------------
--------------- End Of Program --------------------
Aggregation (If you remove "whole", “Part” can exist – “ No Ownership”)
An aggregation is a specific type of composition where no ownership between the complex object and the subobjects is implied. When an aggregate is destroyed, the subobjects are not destroyed.
Typically use pointer variables/reference variable that point to an object that lives outside the scope of the aggregate class
Can use reference values that point to an object that lives outside the scope of the aggregate class
Not responsible for creating/destroying subclasses
Aggregation Code in C++
#include <iostream>
#include <string>
using namespace std;
/********************** Teacher Class ******************/
class Teacher
{
private:
string m_strName;
public:
Teacher(string strName);
~Teacher(void);
string GetName();
};
Teacher::Teacher(string strName) : m_strName(strName)
{
cout<<" Teacher :: Constructor --- Teacher Name :: "<<m_strName<<endl;
}
Teacher::~Teacher(void)
{
cout<<" Teacher :: Destructor --- Teacher Name :: "<<m_strName<<endl;
}
string Teacher::GetName()
{
return m_strName;
}
/********************** Department Class ******************/
class Department
{
private:
Teacher *m_pcTeacher;
Teacher& m_refTeacher;
public:
Department(Teacher *pcTeacher, Teacher& objTeacher);
~Department(void);
};
Department::Department(Teacher *pcTeacher, Teacher& objTeacher)
: m_pcTeacher(pcTeacher), m_refTeacher(objTeacher)
{
cout<<" Department :: Constructor " <<endl;
}
Department::~Department(void)
{
cout<<" Department :: Destructor " <<endl;
}
/********************** Main Function ******************/
int main()
{
freopen ("InstallationDump.Log", "w", stdout);
cout<<"--------------- Start Of Program --------------------"<<endl;
{
// Create a teacher outside the scope of the Department
Teacher objTeacher("Reference Teacher");
Teacher *pTeacher = new Teacher("Pointer Teacher"); // create a teacher
{
cout<<"------------- Inside Block ------------------"<<endl;
// Create a department and use the constructor parameter to pass the teacher to it.
Department cDept(pTeacher,objTeacher);
Department
Teacher
Figure 2: Aggregation
} // cDept goes out of scope here and is destroyed
cout<<"------------- Out of Block ------------------"<<endl;
// pTeacher still exists here because cDept did not destroy it
delete pTeacher;
}
cout<<"--------------- End Of Program --------------------"<<endl;
fclose (stdout);
}
Output
--------------- Start Of Program --------------------
Teacher :: Constructor --- Teacher Name :: Reference Teacher
Teacher :: Constructor --- Teacher Name :: Pointer Teacher
------------- Inside Block ------------------
Department :: Constructor
Department :: Destructor
------------- Out of Block ------------------
Teacher :: Destructor --- Teacher Name :: Pointer Teacher
Teacher :: Destructor --- Teacher Name :: Reference Teacher
--------------- End Of Program --------------------
Problem with these answers is they are half the story: they explain that aggregation and composition are forms of association, but they don't say if it is possible for an association to be neither of those.
I gather based on some brief readings of many posts on SO and some UML docs that there are 4 main concrete forms of class association:
composition: A is-composed-of-a B; B doesn't exist without A, like a room in a home
aggregation: A has-a B; B can exist without A, like a student in a classroom
dependency: A uses-a B; no lifecycle dependency between A and B, like a method call parameter, return value, or a temporary created during a method call
generalization: A is-a B
When a relationship between two entities isn't one of these, it can just be called "an association" in the generic sense of the term, and further described other ways (note, stereotype, etc).
My guess is that the "generic association" is intended to be used primarily in two circumstances:
when the specifics of a relationship are still being worked out; such relationship in a diagram should be converted as soon as possible to what it actually is/will be (one of the other 4).
when a relationship doesn't match any of those 4 predetermined by UML; the "generic" association still gives you a way of representing a relationship that is "not one of the other ones", so that you aren't stuck using an incorrect relationship with a note "this is not actually aggregation, it's just that UML doesn't have any other symbol we could use"
Association, Aggregation, Composition
Association, Aggregation, Composition are about Has a relationship.
Aggregation and Composition are subsets of Association which describe relationship more accurately
Aggregation - independent relationship. An object can be passed and saved inside class via constructor, method, setter...
Composition - dependent relationship. An object is created by owner object
*Association is an alternative for sybtyping
Simple rules:
A "owns" B = Composition : B has no meaning or purpose in the system
without A
A "uses" B = Aggregation : B exists independently (conceptually) from A
A "belongs/Have" B= Association; And B exists just have a relation
Example 1:
A Company is an aggregation of Employees.
A Company is a composition of Accounts. When a Company ceases to do
business its Accounts cease to exist but its People continue to exist.
Employees have association relationship with each other.
Example 2: (very simplified)
A Text Editor owns a Buffer (composition). A Text Editor uses a File
(aggregation). When the Text Editor is closed,
the Buffer is destroyed but the File itself is not destroyed.
https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/types-relationships-object-oriented-programming-oop-sarah-el-dawody/
Composition: is a "part-of" relationship.
for example “engine is part of the car”, “heart is part of the body”.
Association: is a “has-a” type relationship
For example, suppose we have two classes then these two classes are said to be “has-a” relationships if both of these entities share each other’s object for some work and at the same time they can exist without each other's dependency or both have their own lifetime.
The above example showing an association relationship because of both Employee and Manager class using the object of each other and both their own independent life cycle.
Aggregation: is based is on "has-a" relationship and it's is \\a special form of association
for example, “Student” and “address”. Each student must have an address so the relationship between Student class and Address class will be “Has-A” type relationship but vice versa is not true.
I think this link will do your homework: http://ootips.org/uml-hasa.html
To understand the terms I remember an example in my early programming days:
If you have a 'chess board' object that contains 'box' objects that is composition because if the 'chess board' is deleted there is no reason for the boxes to exist anymore.
If you have a 'square' object that have a 'color' object and the square gets deleted the 'color' object may still exist, that is aggregation
Both of them are associations, the main difference is conceptual
Composition:
This is where once you destroy an object (School), another object (Classrooms) which is bound to it would get destroyed too. Both of them can't exist independently.
Aggregation:
This is sorta the exact opposite of the above (Composition) association where once you kill an object (Company), the other object (Employees) which is bound to it can exist on its own.
Association.
Composition and Aggregation are the two forms of association.
From: Remo H. Jansen book “Beginning React: Learning TypeScript 2.x - Second Edition” :
We call association those relationships whose objects have an independent life cycle where there is no ownership of the objects. Let's take a look at an example of a teacher and a student. Multiple students can be associated with a single teacher, and a single student can be associated with multiple teachers, but both have independent life cycles (both can create and delete independently). So, when a teacher leaves the school, we don't need to delete any students, and when a student leaves the school, we don't need to delete any teachers.
We call aggregation those relationships whose objects have an independent life cycle, but there is ownership, and child objects cannot belong to another parent object. Let's take an example of a cell phone and a cell phone battery. A single battery can belong to a phone, but if the phone stops working, and we delete it from our database, the phone battery will not be deleted because it may still be functional. So, in aggregation, while there is ownership, objects have their life cycle
We use the term composition to refer to relationships whose objects don't have an independent life cycle, and if the parent object is deleted, all child objects will also be deleted. Let's take an example of the relationship between questions and answers. Single questions can have multiple answers, and answers cannot belong to multiple questions. If we delete questions, answers will automatically be deleted.
In a very simple sentence:
Aggregation and Composition are subsets of association.
A uses B -> this is an aggregation
A needs B -> is composition.
Read more here.
Association is a relationship between two separate classes and the association can be of any type say one to one, one to may etc. It joins two entirely separate entities.
Aggregation is a special form of association which is a unidirectional one way relationship between classes (or entities), for e.g. Wallet and Money classes. Wallet has Money but money doesn’t need to have Wallet necessarily so its a one directional relationship. In this relationship both the entries can survive if other one ends. In our example if Wallet class is not present, it does not mean that the Money class cannot exist.
Composition is a restricted form of Aggregation in which two entities (or you can say classes) are highly dependent on each other. For e.g. Human and Heart. A human needs heart to live and a heart needs a Human body to survive. In other words when the classes (entities) are dependent on each other and their life span are same (if one dies then another one too) then its a composition. Heart class has no sense if Human class is not present.
I'd like to illustrate how the three terms are implemented in Rails. ActiveRecord calls any type of relationship between two models an association. One would not find very often the terms composition and aggregation, when reading documentation or articles, related to ActiveRecord. An association is created by adding one of the association class macros to the body of the class. Some of these macros are belongs_to, has_one, has_many etc..
If we want to set up a composition or aggregation, we need to add belongs_to to the owned model (also called child) and has_one or has_many to the owning model (also called parent). Wether we set up composition or aggregation depends on the options we pass to the belongs_to call in the child model. Prior to Rails 5, setting up belongs_to without any options created an aggregation, the child could exist without a parent. If we wanted a composition, we needed to explicitly declare this by adding the option required: true:
class Room < ActiveRecord::Base
belongs_to :house, required: true
end
In Rails 5 this was changed. Now, declaring a belongs_to association creates a composition by default, the child cannot exist without a parent. So the above example can be re-written as:
class Room < ApplicationRecord
belongs_to :house
end
If we want to allow the child object to exist without a parent, we need to declare this explicitly via the option optional
class Product < ApplicationRecord
belongs_to :category, optional: true
end
in OOP, classes are related to each other. It means their instances call methods from each other. So, if instances of a class call methods from another class, they are related and generally we model this relationship with ASSOCIATION.
For example in the following code snippet, the Customer class is associated with the Order class. she/he cancels the orders.
class Customer {
private Order[] orders;
public boolean removeCart() {
for (int i = 0 ; i < orders.length ; i++) {
orders[i].cancel();
}
}
}
AGGREGATION means a class has some instances of another class. it's nothing more than association and Martin Fowler suggests not using it. Because when a class is associated with another class it has a reference to that class to invoke the methods on it.
But COMPOSITION is a meaningful subset of association. It means a class is composed of some other classes. For example we have a Student class composed of some other classes like ReportCard. We know that the report card is strongly dependent to the student and if we remove the student from the system, their report card should be removed too.
In OOP, what is the difference between composition (denoted by filled diamond in UML) and association (denoted by empty diamond in UML) relationship between classes. I'm a bit confused. What is aggregation? Can I have a convincing real world example?
COMPOSITION
Imagine a software firm that is composed of different Business Units (or departments) like Storage BU, Networking BU. Automobile BU. The life time of these Business Units is governed by the lifetime of the organization. In other words, these Business Units cannot exist independently without the firm. This is COMPOSITION. (ie the firm is COMPOSED OF business units)
ASSOCIATION
The software firm may have external caterers serving food to the employees. These caterers are NOT PART OF the firm. However, they are ASSOCIATED with the firm. The caterers can exist even if our software firm is closed down. They may serve another firm! Thus the lifetime of caterers is not governed by the lifetime of the software firm. This is typical ASSOCIATION
AGGREGATION
Consider a Car manufacturing unit. We can think of Car as a whole entity and Car Wheel as part of the Car. (at this point, it may look like composition..hold on) The wheel can be created weeks ahead of time, and it can sit in a warehouse before being placed on a car during assembly. In this example, the Wheel class's instance clearly lives independently of the Car class's instance.
Thus, unlike composition, in aggregation, life cycles of the objects involved are not tightly coupled.
Here go a few examples:
I am an employee of a company, hence I am associated to that company. I am not part of it, nor do I compose it, but am related to it, however.
I am composed of organs, which unless are transplanted, will die with me. This is composition, which is a very strong bind between objects. Basically objects are composed by other objects. The verb says everything.
There is also another less bound kind of composition, called aggregation. An aggregation is when objects are composed by other objects, but their life cycles are not necessarily tied. Using an extreme example, a Lego toy is an aggregation of parts. Even though the toy can be dismantled, its parts can be recombined to make a different toy.
Owning and using.
Composition: the object with the reference owns the object referred to, and is responsible for its "lifetime", its destruction (and often creation, though it may be passed in). Also known as a has-a relationship.
Association: the object with the reference uses the object referred to, may not be an exclusive user, and isn't responsible for he referred-to object's lifetime. Also known as a uses-a relationship.
The OP comments:
Can you provide a real world example. Also, what is aggregation? – Marc
Aggregation: an Association that is from whole to part, and that can't be cyclic.
Examples:
Composition: a Car has-an Engine, a Person has-an Address. Basically, must have, controls lifetime.
Association: A Car has-a Driver, some class instance has-an ErrorLogger. Lifetime not controlled, may be shared.
Aggregation: A DOM (Document Object Model, that is the objects that make up a tree of HTML elements) Node has-a (an array of) child Nodes. The Node is top (well, higher) level; it "contains" its children, they don't contain it.
I believe that a code-based example can help to illustrate the concepts given by the above responses.
import java.util.ArrayList;
public final class AssoCia
{
public static void main( String args[] )
{
B b = new B();
ArrayList<C> cs = new ArrayList();
A a = new A( b, cs );
a.addC( new C() );
a.addC( new C() );
a.addC( new C() );
a.listC();
}
}
class A
{
// Association -
// this instance has a object of other class
// as a member of the class.
private B b;
// Association/Aggregation -
// this instance has a collection of objects
// of other class and this collection is a
// member of this class
private ArrayList<C> cs;
private D d;
public A(B b, ArrayList<C> cs)
{
// Association
this.b = b;
// Association/Aggregation
this.cs = cs;
// Association/Composition -
// this instance is responsible for creating
// the instance of the object of the
// other class. Therefore, when this instance
// is liberated from the memory, the object of
// the other class is liberated, too.
this.d = new D();
}
// Dependency -
// only this method needs the object
// of the other class.
public void addC( C c )
{
cs.add( c );
}
public void listC()
{
for ( C c : cs )
{
System.out.println( c );
}
}
}
class B {}
class C {}
class D {}
Independent existence.
An Invoice is composed of line items.
What's a line item that's not on an invoice? It's -- well -- it's nothing. It can't exist independently.
On the other hand, an Invoice is associated with a Customer.
Customer has an independent existence, with or without an invoice.
If the two things have independent existence, they may be associated.
If one thing cannot exist independently, then it is part of a composition.
Usually, composition means that the lifetime of the contained object is bounded by that of the container, whereas association is a reference to an object which may exist independently.
However, this is just the practice I've observed. I hate to admit it, but ploughing through the UML2 spec isn't high on my list of fun stuff to do!
Composition is a stricter relationship than aggregation. Composition means that something is so strongly related to something else that they cannot basically exist independently, or if they can, they live in different contexts.
Real world example: you define a GUI window, and then a text field where to write something.
Between the class defining the GUI and the class defining the text field there's composition. Together, they compose a widget which can be seen as an entity on its own. Suppose you delete the window, and you delete the text field as well.
Aggregation is different, in the sense that the link between the two entities is temporary, unstable, and occasional. A real world example. Suppose you have a database of objects containing multiple data instances. Now you run some filter to collect the data instances obeying a given criterium, and the resulting instances are pushed into a graphical list so that the user can see them. When the graphical widget receives the objects, it can form an aggregation of these entities, and present them. If the user closes the window with the graphical list, and the latter get deleted, the data objects should not be deleted. Maybe they are displayed somewhere else, or you still need them.
Also, in general, composition is defined at creation time. Aggregation is instead defined later in the object lifetime.
Composition means a part of the entity state is encapsulated by another type but it is conceptualy part of the entity state. For example you may have a address type and a employee entity type that includes a address.
Association means that a entity type is assocciated with another entity type but the assocciated entity is conceptualy not part of the entity state. For example a employee may be assocciated with a company.