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Mastering Python Design Patterns

You're reading from   Mastering Python Design Patterns Start learning Python programming to a better standard by mastering the art of Python design patterns

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jan 2015
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781783989324
Length 212 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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 Kasampalis Kasampalis
Author Profile Icon Kasampalis
Kasampalis
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Table of Contents (23) Chapters Close

Mastering Python Design Patterns
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
1. The Factory Pattern FREE CHAPTER 2. The Builder Pattern 3. The Prototype Pattern 4. The Adapter Pattern 5. The Decorator Pattern 6. The Facade Pattern 7. The Flyweight Pattern 8. The Model-View-Controller Pattern 9. The Proxy Pattern 10. The Chain of Responsibility Pattern 11. The Command Pattern 12. The Interpreter Pattern 13. The Observer Pattern 14. The State Pattern 15. The Strategy Pattern 16. The Template Pattern Index

Implementation


I could use any of the common frameworks to demonstrate how to use MVC but I feel that the picture will be incomplete. So I decided to show how to implement MVC from scratch, using a very simple example: a quote printer. The idea is extremely simple. The user enters a number and sees the quote related to that number. The quotes are stored in a quotes tuple. This is the data that normally exists in a database, file, and so on, and only the model has direct access to it.

Let's consider the example in the following code:

quotes = ('A man is not complete until he is married. Then he is finished.', 'As I said before, I never repeat myself.', 'Behind a successful man is an exhausted woman.', 'Black holes really suck...', 'Facts are stubborn things.')

The model is minimalistic. It only has a get_quote() method that returns the quote (string) of the quotes tuple based on its index n. Note that n can be less than or equal to 0, due to the way indexing works in Python. Improving this...

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