Prefer composition over inheritance?
Why prefer composition over inheritance? What trade-offs are there for each approach? When should you choose inheritance over composition?
Solution 1:
Prefer composition over inheritance as it is more malleable / easy to modify later, but do not use a compose-always approach. With composition, it's easy to change behavior on the fly with Dependency Injection / Setters. Inheritance is more rigid as most languages do not allow you to derive from more than one type. So the goose is more or less cooked once you derive from TypeA.
My acid test for the above is:
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Does TypeB want to expose the complete interface (all public methods no less) of TypeA such that TypeB can be used where TypeA is expected? Indicates Inheritance.
- e.g. A Cessna biplane will expose the complete interface of an airplane, if not more. So that makes it fit to derive from Airplane.
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Does TypeB want only some/part of the behavior exposed by TypeA? Indicates need for Composition.
- e.g. A Bird may need only the fly behavior of an Airplane. In this case, it makes sense to extract it out as an interface / class / both and make it a member of both classes.
Update: Just came back to my answer and it seems now that it is incomplete without a specific mention of Barbara Liskov's Liskov Substitution Principle as a test for 'Should I be inheriting from this type?'
Solution 2:
Think of containment as a has a relationship. A car "has an" engine, a person "has a" name, etc.
Think of inheritance as an is a relationship. A car "is a" vehicle, a person "is a" mammal, etc.
I take no credit for this approach. I took it straight from the Second Edition of Code Complete by Steve McConnell, Section 6.3.