Chetan Giridhar is a technology leader, open source enthusiast, and Python developer. He has written multiple articles on technology and development practices in magazines such as LinuxForYou and Agile Record, and has published technical papers in the Python Papers journal. He has been a speaker at PyCon conferences such as PyCon India, Asia-Pacific, and New Zealand and loves working on real-time communications, distributed systems, and cloud applications. Chetan has been a reviewer at Packt Publishing and has contributed to books on IPython Visualizations and Core Python.
Learning Python Design Patterns - Second Edition - Second Edition
By :
Learning Python Design Patterns - Second Edition - Second Edition
By:
Overview of this book
With the increasing focus on optimized software architecture and design it is important that software architects think about optimizations in object creation, code structure, and interaction between objects at the architecture or design level. This makes sure that the cost of software maintenance is low and code can be easily reused or is adaptable to change. The key to this is reusability and low maintenance in design patterns.
Building on the success of the previous edition, Learning Python Design Patterns, Second Edition will help you implement real-world scenarios with Python’s latest release, Python v3.5.
We start by introducing design patterns from the Python perspective. As you progress through the book, you will learn about Singleton patterns, Factory patterns, and Façade patterns in detail. After this, we’ll look at how to control object access with proxy patterns. It also covers observer patterns, command patterns, and compound patterns.
By the end of the book, you will have enhanced your professional abilities in software architecture, design, and development.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
Learning Python Design Patterns Second Edition
Credits
Foreword
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Free Chapter
Introduction to Design Patterns
The Singleton Design Pattern
The Factory Pattern – Building Factories to Create Objects
The Façade Pattern – Being Adaptive with Façade
The Proxy Pattern – Controlling Object Access
The Observer Pattern – Keeping Objects in the Know
The Command Pattern – Encapsulating Invocation
The Template Method Pattern – Encapsulating Algorithm
Model-View-Controller – Compound Patterns
The State Design Pattern
AntiPatterns
Index
Customer Reviews