Book Image

Hands-On Design Patterns and Best Practices with Julia

By : Tom Kwong
Book Image

Hands-On Design Patterns and Best Practices with Julia

By: Tom Kwong

Overview of this book

Design patterns are fundamental techniques for developing reusable and maintainable code. They provide a set of proven solutions that allow developers to solve problems in software development quickly. This book will demonstrate how to leverage design patterns with real-world applications. Starting with an overview of design patterns and best practices in application design, you'll learn about some of the most fundamental Julia features such as modules, data types, functions/interfaces, and metaprogramming. You'll then get to grips with the modern Julia design patterns for building large-scale applications with a focus on performance, reusability, robustness, and maintainability. The book also covers anti-patterns and how to avoid common mistakes and pitfalls in development. You'll see how traditional object-oriented patterns can be implemented differently and more effectively in Julia. Finally, you'll explore various use cases and examples, such as how expert Julia developers use design patterns in their open source packages. By the end of this Julia programming book, you'll have learned methods to improve software design, extensibility, and reusability, and be able to use design patterns efficiently to overcome common challenges in software development.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
1
Section 1: Getting Started with Design Patterns
3
Section 2: Julia Fundamentals
7
Section 3: Implementing Design Patterns
15
Section 4: Advanced Topics

Code generation pattern

New Julia programmers are often amazed by the conciseness of the language. Surprisingly, some of the very popular Julia packages are written with very little code. There are multiple reasons for that, but one major contributing factor is the ability to generate code dynamically in Julia.

In certain use cases, code generation can be extremely helpful. In this section, we will look into some code generation examples and try to explain how it can be done properly.

Introducing the file logger use case

Let's consider a use case for building a file logging facility. 

Suppose that we want to provide an API for logging messages to files based upon a set of logging levels. By default, we will support...