274 lines
6.6 KiB
ReStructuredText
274 lines
6.6 KiB
ReStructuredText
Persisting the Decorator Pattern
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================================
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.. sectionauthor:: Chris Woodford <chris.woodford@gmail.com>
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This recipe will show you a simple example of how you can use
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Doctrine 2 to persist an implementaton of the
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`Decorator Pattern <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Decorator_pattern>`_
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Component
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---------
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The ``Component`` class needs to be persisted, so it's going to
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be an ``Entity``. As the top of the inheritance hierarchy, it's going
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to have to define the persistent inheritance. For this example, we
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will use Single Table Inheritance, but Class Table Inheritance
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would work as well. In the discriminator map, we will define two
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concrete subclasses, ``ConcreteComponent`` and ``ConcreteDecorator``.
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.. code-block:: php
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<?php
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namespace Test;
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/**
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* @Entity
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* @InheritanceType("SINGLE_TABLE")
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* @DiscriminatorColumn(name="discr", type="string")
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* @DiscriminatorMap({"cc" = "Test\Component\ConcreteComponent",
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"cd" = "Test\Decorator\ConcreteDecorator"})
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*/
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abstract class Component
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{
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/**
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* @Id @Column(type="integer")
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* @GeneratedValue(strategy="AUTO")
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*/
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protected $id;
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/** @Column(type="string", nullable="true") */
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protected $name;
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/**
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* Get id
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* @return integer $id
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*/
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public function getId()
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{
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return $this->id;
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}
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/**
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* Set name
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* @param string $name
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*/
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public function setName($name)
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{
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$this->name = $name;
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}
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/**
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* Get name
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* @return string $name
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*/
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public function getName()
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{
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return $this->name;
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}
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}
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ConcreteComponent
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-----------------
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The ``ConcreteComponent`` class is pretty simple and doesn't do much
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more than extend the abstract ``Component`` class (only for the
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purpose of keeping this example simple).
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.. code-block:: php
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<?php
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namespace Test\Component;
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use Test\Component;
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/** @Entity */
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class ConcreteComponent extends Component
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{}
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Decorator
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---------
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The ``Decorator`` class doesn't need to be persisted, but it does
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need to define an association with a persisted ``Entity``. We can
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use a ``MappedSuperclass`` for this.
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.. code-block:: php
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<?php
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namespace Test;
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/** @MappedSuperclass */
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abstract class Decorator extends Component
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{
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/**
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* @OneToOne(targetEntity="Test\Component", cascade={"all"})
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* @JoinColumn(name="decorates", referencedColumnName="id")
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*/
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protected $decorates;
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/**
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* intialize the decorator
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* @param Component $c
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*/
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public function __construct(Component $c)
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{
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$this->setDecorates($c);
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}
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/**
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* (non-PHPdoc)
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* @see Test.Component::getName()
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*/
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public function getName()
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{
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return 'Decorated ' . $this->getDecorates()->getName();
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}
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/**
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* the component being decorated
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* @return Component
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*/
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protected function getDecorates()
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{
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return $this->decorates;
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}
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/**
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* sets the component being decorated
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* @param Component $c
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*/
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protected function setDecorates(Component $c)
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{
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$this->decorates = $c;
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}
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}
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All operations on the ``Decorator`` (i.e. persist, remove, etc) will
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cascade from the ``Decorator`` to the ``Component``. This means that
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when we persist a ``Decorator``, Doctrine will take care of
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persisting the chain of decorated objects for us. A ``Decorator`` can
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be treated exactly as a ``Component`` when it comes time to
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persisting it.
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The ``Decorator's`` constructor accepts an instance of a
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``Component``, as defined by the ``Decorator`` pattern. The
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setDecorates/getDecorates methods have been defined as protected to
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hide the fact that a ``Decorator`` is decorating a ``Component`` and
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keeps the ``Component`` interface and the ``Decorator`` interface
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identical.
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To illustrate the intended result of the ``Decorator`` pattern, the
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getName() method has been overridden to append a string to the
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``Component's`` getName() method.
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ConcreteDecorator
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-----------------
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The final class required to complete a simple implementation of the
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Decorator pattern is the ``ConcreteDecorator``. In order to further
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illustrate how the ``Decorator`` can alter data as it moves through
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the chain of decoration, a new field, "special", has been added to
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this class. The getName() has been overridden and appends the value
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of the getSpecial() method to its return value.
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.. code-block:: php
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<?php
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namespace Test\Decorator;
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use Test\Decorator;
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/** @Entity */
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class ConcreteDecorator extends Decorator
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{
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/** @Column(type="string", nullable="true") */
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protected $special;
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/**
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* Set special
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* @param string $special
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*/
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public function setSpecial($special)
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{
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$this->special = $special;
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}
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/**
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* Get special
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* @return string $special
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*/
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public function getSpecial()
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{
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return $this->special;
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}
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/**
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* (non-PHPdoc)
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* @see Test.Component::getName()
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*/
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public function getName()
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{
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return '[' . $this->getSpecial()
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. '] ' . parent::getName();
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}
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}
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Examples
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--------
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Here is an example of how to persist and retrieve your decorated
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objects
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.. code-block:: php
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<?php
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use Test\Component\ConcreteComponent,
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Test\Decorator\ConcreteDecorator;
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// assumes Doctrine 2 is configured and an instance of
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// an EntityManager is available as $em
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// create a new concrete component
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$c = new ConcreteComponent();
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$c->setName('Test Component 1');
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$em->persist($c); // assigned unique ID = 1
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// create a new concrete decorator
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$c = new ConcreteComponent();
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$c->setName('Test Component 2');
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$d = new ConcreteDecorator($c);
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$d->setSpecial('Really');
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$em->persist($d);
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// assigns c as unique ID = 2, and d as unique ID = 3
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$em->flush();
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$c = $em->find('Test\Component', 1);
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$d = $em->find('Test\Component', 3);
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echo get_class($c);
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// prints: Test\Component\ConcreteComponent
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echo $c->getName();
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// prints: Test Component 1
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echo get_class($d)
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// prints: Test\Component\ConcreteDecorator
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echo $d->getName();
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// prints: [Really] Decorated Test Component 2
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