I used the events system from Doctrine recently and I would like to understand more in depth the Mediator pattern.
From Wikipedia: "With the mediator pattern, communication between objects is encapsulated with a mediator object. Objects no longer communicate directly with each other, but instead communicate through the mediator. This reduces the dependencies between communicating objects, thereby lowering the coupling."
Good, let's see some code without mediator pattern.
I have a "Person" class and I would want to log all the modifications that happen on those class properties. We can say the "Person" class is the producer of events and the "Logger" class is the consumer.
<?php class Logger { public function addMessage($msg) { echo $msg; } } class Person { private $name; private $logger; public function __construct($logger) { $this->logger = $logger; } public function getLogger() { return $this->logger; } public function setName($name) { $this->name = $name; $msg = "Name was set to: {$name}"; $this->logger->addMessage($msg); } public function getName() { return $this->name; } } $logger = new Logger(); $first = new Person($logger); $first->setName('Ion');
I am injecting an object of class Logger into Person and in the setName() method I am calling (call the "Consumer") $logger->addMessage().
The problem is if I want to modify the Logger class, like change addMessage() to addLogMessage() or whatever, I will need to modify also the Person class, the two classes are strongly coupled.
Mediator
When using the mediator pattern between the Producer and the Consumer of the event there is another class: the mediator. I will call my class "Dispatcher".
The Dispatcher class has two methods:
- addListener($eventName, $callback)
- notify($eventName) - in my case I added also some parameters to better exemplify
Now I will be injecting the Dispatcher into the Person constructor, and no direct relation will exist between Person and Logger class (producer and consumer).
When setting a new value for property Name, the dispatcher will notify (read this call) all callbacks associated with that event name.
I will create a listener for the 'property.changed' event which will call $logger->addMessage() method. Here is where the connection between Producer and Consumer is made.
<?php class Logging { public function addMessage($msg) { echo $msg; } } class Dispatcher { private $listeners=array(); public function addListener($eventName, $callback) { $this->listeners[$eventName]=$callback; } public function notify($eventName, $parameter1, $parameter2) { $this->listeners[$eventName]($parameter1, $parameter2); } } class Person { private $name; private $dispatcher; public function __construct($dispatcher) { $this->dispatcher = $dispatcher; } public function setName($name) { $this->name = $name; $this->dispatcher->notify('property.changed', 'Name', $name); } public function getName() { return $this->name; } } $log = new Logging(); $dispatcher = new Dispatcher; $dispatcher->addListener('property.changed', function ($propertyName, $value) use ($log) { $log->addMessage( "Property - {$propertyName} - was set to: {$value}" ); }); $first = new Person($dispatcher); $first->setName('Ion');
Of course this is a very basic implementation of the concept, real life example are EventDispatcher from Symfony or EventManager from Doctrine.
Some source of inspiration for this article:
http://blog.ircmaxell.com/2013/01/mediators-programming-with-anthony.html
http://blog.servergrove.com/2013/10/23/symfony2-components-overview-eventdispatcher