Saturday, December 22, 2012

Quick Review: Basic Observer Design Pattern in Ruby



Every so often, it's nice to give yourself a quick review of basic topics in software. Today, I wanted to review the observer design pattern and give a very simple implementation of it in Ruby. The observer pattern allows several observers to be notified when an observable object, or subject, changes its state. When the subject sends an update notification, the observers can act accordingly based on their type.

When to Observe

The observer pattern is useful for cases where an object is dependent on the state of another. The subject manages a list of zero or more observers made up of several types. Two common practical examples are:
  • graphical interface elements of an application will change based on the state of back-end data
  • a coupon subscription service will send notifications to several devices based on deals at different stores


Observable (Subject)

We'll start by implementing the Observable module for our subject. Remember, the subject is responsible for managing and notifying several observers when its state changes.
module Observable

  attr_accessor :state

  def attachObserver(o)
    @observers ||= []
    @observers << o if !@observers.include?(o)
  end

  def removeObserver(o)
    @observers.delete(o)
  end

  def state=(s)
    @state = s
    @observers.each do |o|
      o.update(self) # more on update() later!
    end
  end

end
Let's break down the interesting parts:
def attachObserver(o)
  @observers ||= []
  @observers << o if !@observers.include?(o)
end

def removeObserver(o)
  @observers.delete(o)
end
These methods are used to manage the observers for our subject. We don't want the same object in our list twice, so we only add an object if it isn't already observing our subject.
def state=(s)
  @state = s
  @observers.each do |o|
    o.update(self) # more on update() later!
  end
end
When the subject changes its state, it needs to notify any object that is observing it. We overwrite the default behavior for state=, which is a method created for us by attr_accessor. After reassigning the state value, we call update on all the managed observers.

Observer

Here is what our Observer module looks:
module Observer
  
  def update(o)
    raise 'Implement this!'
  end

end
We leave the functionality of update to the class including our module. This way, the Observer module behaves as an abstract class with an interface that needs to be implemented by the includer. This gives us the ability to include the Observer module into any class we want!

The Ant Colony

As a simple example, let's create an ant colony using our modules. First, we define our subject, the Queen Ant:
class QueenAnt
  include Observable
end
Next, let's define an observer:
class WorkerAnt
  include Observer

  def update(o)
    p "I am working hard. Queen has changed state to #{o.state}!"
  end
end
The WorkerAnt defines its own unique way of handling the state changes of the queen. Let's create some worker ant objects to see how this works:
queen = QueenAnt.new

worker1 = WorkerAnt.new
worker2 = WorkerAnt.new
worker3 = WorkerAnt.new

queen.attachObserver(worker1)
queen.attachObserver(worker2)

queen.state = 'sleeping'
# I am working hard. Queen has changed state to sleeping!" <-- worker1
# I am working hard. Queen has changed state to sleeping!" <-- worker2
When the queen changes state, the worker1 and worker2 instances get notified and react accordingly. Since worker3 was not attached, it does not get notified.

The queen can handle any type of observer, not just WorkerAnts. Let's create two additional observer classes:
class SoldierAnt
  include Observer

  def update(o)
    p "Reporting for duty! Queen has changed state to #{o.state}!"
  end
end

class BreederAnt
  include Observer

  def update(o)
    p "Need to look for a mate. Queen has changed state to #{o.state}!"
  end
end
Now, let's create a soldier and breeder instance to observe the queen:
queen = QueenAnt.new

soldier = SoldierAnt.new
breeder = BreederAnt.new

queen.attachObserver(soldier)
queen.attachObserver(breeder)

queen.state = 'sleeping'
# Reporting for duty! Queen has changed state to sleeping!
# Need to look for a mate. Queen has changed state to sleeping!
SoldierAnt and BreederAnt are different classes, but implement the same Observer interface. When the queen changes her state, the two instances (soldier and breeder) get notified and react accordingly.

There you have it! Please leave any questions, opinions, and/or corrections below in the comments.

4 comments:

  1. Very well written. Love the way you explained it! Thanks!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Very good, I could understand it perfectly, congrats!

    ReplyDelete
  3. Excellent article! You have a talent to explain the stuff.

    ReplyDelete
  4. It is nice blog Thank you provide important information and I am searching for the same information to save my time Ruby on Rails Online Training

    ReplyDelete