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Table of Contents
Tell Don't Ask/Information Expert (TdA/IE)
Variants and Alternative Names
- Expert
- Do It Myself
Context
Principle Statement
Assign a responsibility to this module which has the largest subset of the required information.
Description
Each module has a set of responsibilities. Subsystems have specific tasks, packages group several related classes, classes have methods and attributes, and so on. So there is a kind of mapping between modules and responsibilities. This mapping is good when the information which is necessary to fulfill the given task is present in the given module so there is no need to acquire all this information.
Rationale
When this principle is not adhered to, then a module has a responsibility for which it is lacking some information. So in order to fulfill the task the module has to first acquire the needed information by invoking other modules. This increases the dependencies between the modules (which may lead toripple effects).
Strategies
Origin
Craig Larman: Applying UML and Patterns – An Introduction to Object-Oriented Analysis and Design and Iterative Development
Evidence
Relations to Other Principles
Generalizations
- Low Coupling Adhering to the information expert principle leads to low coupling as there is less need to communicate with other modules to get the necessary information.
- High Cohesion Adhering to information expert also means that a module only has responsibilities which belong together. So this increases cohesion.
Specializations
Contrary Principles
- More Is More Complex (MIMC): Adhering to TdA/IE sometimes results in adding further methods.
- Principle of Separate Understandability (PSU): Assigning responsibilities using TdA/IE bears the danger of violating PSU as responsibilities are assigned based on data availability instead of separate understandability.
Complementary Principles
- Model Principle (MP): TdA/IE tells how to distribute functionality among the natural classes which are created according to the Model Principle.
Principle Collections
Example
Description Status
Further Reading
- Andrew Hunt and David Thomas: The Art of Enbugging