Take Java syntax as an example, though the question itself is language independent. If the following snippet takes an object MyAbstractEmailTemplate as input argument in the method setTemplate, the class MyGateway will then become tightly-coupled with the object MyAbstractEmailTemplate, which lessens the re-usability of the class MyGateway.
A compromise is to use dependency-injection to ease the instantiation of MyAbstractEmailTemplate. This might solve the coupling problem
to some extent, but the interface is still rigid, hardly providing enough flexibility to
other developers/ applications.
So if we only use primitive data type (or even plain XML in web service) as the input/ output of a method, it seems the coupling problem no longer exists. So what do you think?
public class MyGateway {
protected MyAbstractEmailTemplate template;
public void setTemplate(MyAbstractEmailTemplate template) {
this.template = template;
}
}
MyGatewayhas to assume something about the inputs. Even if it used XML, it would have to assume something about the structure and content of the XML. Coupling isn’t an evil in its own right; expresses the contract between two pieces of code. The oft-repeated advice to avoid tight coupling is really just saying that coupling should express the essence of a contract, not more and not less. Passing a specific type (particularly an interface type) is a very good way to achieve this balance.