Misplaced Pages

Marker interface pattern

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "Marker interface pattern" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (June 2013) (Learn how and when to remove this message)

The marker interface pattern is a design pattern in computer science, used with languages that provide run-time type information about objects. It provides a means to associate metadata with a class where the language does not have explicit support for such metadata.

To use this pattern, a class implements a marker interface (also called tagging interface) which is an empty interface, and methods that interact with instances of that class test for the existence of the interface. Whereas a typical interface specifies functionality (in the form of method declarations) that an implementing class must support, a marker interface need not do so. The mere presence of such an interface indicates specific behavior on the part of the implementing class. Hybrid interfaces, which both act as markers and specify required methods, are possible but may prove confusing if improperly used.

Example

An example of the application of marker interfaces from the Java programming language is the Serializable interface:

package java.io;
public interface Serializable {
}

A class implements this interface to indicate that its non-transient data members can be written to an ObjectOutputStream. The ObjectOutputStream private method writeObject0(Object,boolean) contains a series of instanceof tests to determine writeability, one of which looks for the Serializable interface. If any of these tests fails, the method throws a NotSerializableException.

Critique

One problem with marker interfaces is that, since an interface defines a contract for implementing classes, and that contract is inherited by all subclasses, a marker cannot be "unimplemented". In the example given, any subclass not intended for serialization (perhaps it depends on transient state), must explicitly throw NotSerializableException exceptions (per ObjectOutputStream docs).

Another solution is for the language to support metadata directly:

  • Both the .NET Framework and Java (as of Java 5 (1.5)) provide support for such metadata. In .NET, they are called "custom attributes", in Java they are called "annotations". Despite the different name, they are conceptually the same thing. They can be defined on classes, member variables, methods, and method parameters and may be accessed using reflection.
  • In Python, the term "marker interface" is common in Zope and Plone. Interfaces are declared as metadata and subclasses can use implementsOnly to declare they do not implement everything from their super classes.

See also

References

  1. Bloch, Joshua (2008). "Item 37: Use marker interfaces to define types". Effective Java (Second ed.). Addison-Wesley. p. 179. ISBN 978-0-321-35668-0.
  2. "Marker interface in Java". GeeksforGeeks. 2017-03-06. Retrieved 2022-05-01.

Further reading

Effective Java by Joshua Bloch.

Software design patterns
Gang of Four
patterns
Creational
Structural
Behavioral
Concurrency
patterns
Architectural
patterns
Other
patterns
Books
People
Communities
See also
  1. Bloch, Joshua (2018). Effective Java (Third ed.). Boston. ISBN 978-0-13-468599-1. OCLC 1018432176.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
Categories: