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Strategy Design Pattern

This article describes the Strategy design pattern. This is a behavioral design pattern, a category of design pattern used by software engineers, when writing computer programs.

Introduction

The Strategy (or Policy) pattern is a design pattern, used in software engineering to define a family of actions or algorithms that can be selected depending on the object. It essentially keeps a set of pointers to functions and calls them depending on the object requirements.

It is defined as a behavioral design pattern, because the actions depend on the object.

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Benefits

It allows conditional processing depending on run-time values.
The conditional processes themselves can be shared between classes, allowing reuse and abstraction of a function that can be altered without breaking the class that uses it.

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Examples of the pattern

A validation framework may choose which validation classes to use against an object, depending on it's type.

 

 

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See Also

Link to domain parent articles and related articles in TechNet Wiki.

 

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Community Resources

These are the external links, including links to Microsoft and TechNet sites that are non-Wiki

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References section

Use this section if you pulled source material and ideas from other sites, blogs, or forums. Make sure you have permission from authors to use their material.

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