পৃষ্ঠাসমূহ

Search Your Article

CS

 

Welcome to GoogleDG – your one-stop destination for free learning resources, guides, and digital tools.

At GoogleDG, we believe that knowledge should be accessible to everyone. Our mission is to provide readers with valuable ebooks, tutorials, and tech-related content that makes learning easier, faster, and more enjoyable.

What We Offer:

  • 📘 Free & Helpful Ebooks – covering education, technology, self-development, and more.

  • 💻 Step-by-Step Tutorials – practical guides on digital tools, apps, and software.

  • 🌐 Tech Updates & Tips – simplified information to keep you informed in the fast-changing digital world.

  • 🎯 Learning Support – resources designed to support students, professionals, and lifelong learners.

    Latest world News 

     

Our Vision

To create a digital knowledge hub where anyone, from beginners to advanced learners, can find trustworthy resources and grow their skills.

Why Choose Us?

✔ Simple explanations of complex topics
✔ 100% free access to resources
✔ Regularly updated content
✔ A community that values knowledge sharing

We are continuously working to expand our content library and provide readers with the most useful and relevant digital learning materials.

📩 If you’d like to connect, share feedback, or suggest topics, feel free to reach us through the Contact page.

Pageviews

Sunday, January 15, 2017

Design Patterns - Memento Pattern

Memento pattern is used to restore state of an object to a previous state. Memento pattern falls under behavioral pattern category.

Implementation

Memento pattern uses three actor classes. Memento contains state of an object to be restored. Originator creates and stores states in Memento objects and Caretaker object is responsible to restore object state from Memento. We have created classes Memento, Originator and CareTaker.
MementoPatternDemo, our demo class, will use CareTaker and Originator objects to show restoration of object states.
Memento Pattern UML Diagram

Step 1

Create Memento class.
Memento.java
public class Memento {
   private String state;

   public Memento(String state){
      this.state = state;
   }

   public String getState(){
      return state;
   } 
}

Step 2

Create Originator class
Originator.java
public class Originator {
   private String state;

   public void setState(String state){
      this.state = state;
   }

   public String getState(){
      return state;
   }

   public Memento saveStateToMemento(){
      return new Memento(state);
   }

   public void getStateFromMemento(Memento memento){
      state = Memento.getState();
   }
}

Step 3

Create CareTaker class
CareTaker.java
import java.util.ArrayList;
import java.util.List;

public class CareTaker {
   private List<Memento> mementoList = new ArrayList<Memento>();

   public void add(Memento state){
      mementoList.add(state);
   }

   public Memento get(int index){
      return mementoList.get(index);
   }
}

Step 4

Use CareTaker and Originator objects.
MementoPatternDemo.java
public class MementoPatternDemo {
   public static void main(String[] args) {
   
      Originator originator = new Originator();
      CareTaker careTaker = new CareTaker();
      
      originator.setState("State #1");
      originator.setState("State #2");
      careTaker.add(originator.saveStateToMemento());
      
      originator.setState("State #3");
      careTaker.add(originator.saveStateToMemento());
      
      originator.setState("State #4");
      System.out.println("Current State: " + originator.getState());  
      
      originator.getStateFromMemento(careTaker.get(0));
      System.out.println("First saved State: " + originator.getState());
      originator.getStateFromMemento(careTaker.get(1));
      System.out.println("Second saved State: " + originator.getState());
   }
}

Step 5

Verify the output.
Current State: State #4
First saved State: State #2
Second saved State: State #3

No comments:

Post a Comment