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Home/ Questions/Q 567443
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T13:05:00+00:00 2026-05-13T13:05:00+00:00

Is there any difference in terms of implementation as how a composition design can

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Is there any difference in terms of implementation as how a composition design can be different from delegation. For example the code below seems to be doing delegation since the user cannot access the composed object (i.e “a”) without using b. Hence, the user would need to invoke interfaces of class b and then “class b” invoke appropriate interfaces of “class a” making it delegation. Does this make sense ?

Class A {
friend class B;
private: 
A(){}; //dont want user to instantiate this class object since it wont sense without any context. Just like a room with no house.
void PrintStructure(){};
};

Class B{
public:
void PrintStructure(){a.PrintStructure();} //delegate

private:
A a; //composition
};
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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T13:05:00+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 1:05 pm

    The term “composition” is usually used in terms of object modelling as an expression of a “has-a” relationship and is a form of association (another being aggregation). This is usually contrasted with “inheritance” (“is-a” relationship). So:

    What’s the difference between composition and aggregation? Composition implies that the child cannot exist without the context of the parent.

    For example, a House has one or more Rooms. That’s a composition relationship. Delete the house and the rooms also cease to exist. A House also has a number of occupants, being instances of Person. That’s an aggregation relationship because those people exist outside of the context of that house.

    Delegation is nothing more than an implementation detail. A class has a public interface that describes its state and behaviour. How that is implemented is irrelevant. It could delegate to other objects or not.

    You’ll note that both A and B from your example have the same external interface. It’s more common to do something like this:

    // this represents an interface
    class A {
    public:
      virtual void printStructure() = 0;
    }
    

    with concrete classes:

    class ConcreteA : A {
    public:
      virtual void printStructure() { ... }
    }
    

    and

    class DelegateA : A {
    public:
      DelegateA(A& a) { this.a = a; }
      virtual void printStructure() { a.printStructure(); }
    private:
      A a;
    }
    

    Excuse my probably C++ syntax errors. I’m a little rusty.

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