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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 14, 20262026-05-14T04:49:14+00:00 2026-05-14T04:49:14+00:00

The Decorator Pattern is dynamic extension-at-runtime of classes. It dynamically forms a is-a relationship.

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The Decorator Pattern is dynamic extension-at-runtime of classes. It dynamically forms a is-a relationship.

I started to wonder if I was over-complicating my API by using the Decorator Pattern after I got this answer about the difference between a mixin and an abstract class.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-14T04:49:15+00:00Added an answer on May 14, 2026 at 4:49 am

    A mixin is apt when you’re adding some behavior to your class. e.g. the ability to enumerate in case of a collection type. You can mixin as many sets of behavior into your class as you want. Its a nice way to reuse common code ; you basically get a bunch of methods for free.

    A decorator on the other hand is more of a sneaky interceptor. It exposes the same public interface as the target object, contains a target object to which it delegates all client calls ; however it decorates the call with some pre and/or post processing. e.g. if I’m writing code against a MyCollection and I want all calls to this type to be logged. I could derive a new decorator MyCollectionWithTimeStampedLogging both deriving from an ICollection base so that they look identical to the client. The decorator would take an instance of ICollection as a ctor param and delegate calls to it. e.g. Add would look like this

    public void Add( int item)
    {
      _logger.log(String.Format( "{0} Add called with param {1}", DateTime.Now, item.ToString());
      _collection.Add(item);
      _logger.log(String.Format( "{0} Add completed with param {1}", DateTime.Now, item.ToString());
    }
    
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