Memento pattern

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The memento pattern is a software design pattern that provides the ability to restore an object to its previous state (undo via rollback).

The memento pattern is implemented with three objects: the originator, a caretaker and a memento. The originator is some object that has an internal state. The caretaker is going to do something to the originator, but wants to be able to undo the change. The caretaker first asks the originator for a memento object. Then it does whatever operation (or sequence of operations) it was going to do. To roll back to the state before the operations, it returns the memento object to the originator. The memento object itself is an opaque object (one which the caretaker cannot, or should not, change). When using this pattern, care should be taken if the originator may change other objects or resources - the memento pattern operates on a single object.

Classic examples of the memento pattern include the seed of a pseudorandom number generator (it will always produce the same sequence thereafter when initialized with the seed state)[citation needed][clarification needed] and the state in a finite state machine.

Java Example

The following Java program illustrates the "undo" usage of the Memento Pattern.

import java.util.List;
import java.util.ArrayList;
class Originator {
    private String state;
    // The class could also contain additional data that is not part of the
    // state saved in the memento..
 
    public void set(String state) {
        System.out.println("Originator: Setting state to " + state);
        this.state = state;
    }
 
    public Memento saveToMemento() {
        System.out.println("Originator: Saving to Memento.");
        return new Memento(this.state);
    }
 
    public void restoreFromMemento(Memento memento) {
        this.state = memento.getSavedState();
        System.out.println("Originator: State after restoring from Memento: " + state);
    }
 
    public static class Memento {
        private final String state;
 
        public Memento(String stateToSave) {
            state = stateToSave;
        }
 
        public String getSavedState() {
            return state;
        }
    }
}
 
class Caretaker {
    public static void main(String[] args) {
        List<Originator.Memento> savedStates = new ArrayList<Originator.Memento>();
 
        Originator originator = new Originator();
        originator.set("State1");
        originator.set("State2");
        savedStates.add(originator.saveToMemento());
        originator.set("State3");
        // We can request multiple mementos, and choose which one to roll back to.
        savedStates.add(originator.saveToMemento());
        originator.set("State4");
 
        originator.restoreFromMemento(savedStates.get(1));   
    }
}

The output is:

Originator: Setting state to State1
Originator: Setting state to State2
Originator: Saving to Memento.
Originator: Setting state to State3
Originator: Saving to Memento.
Originator: Setting state to State4
Originator: State after restoring from Memento: State3

This example uses a String as the state, which is an immutable object in Java. In real-life scenarios the state will almost always be an object, in which case a copy of the state must be done.

It must be said that the implementation shown has a drawback: it declares an internal class. It would be better if the memento strategy could apply on more than one object.

There are mainly three other ways to achieve Memento:

  1. Serialization.
  2. A class declared in the same package.
  3. The object can also be accessed via a proxy, which can achieve any save/restore operation on the object.

C# Example

The memento pattern allows one to capture the internal state of an object without violating encapsulation such that later one can undo/revert the changes if required. Here one can see that the memento object is actually used to revert the changes made in the object.

//IVSR : Memento Example in C#

    //original object
    public class OriginalObject
    {
        public string String1 { get; set; }
        public string String2 { get; set; }
        public Memento MyMemento { get; set; }

        public OriginalObject(string str1, string str2)
        {
            this.String1 = str1;
            this.String2 = str2;
            this.MyMemento = new Memento(str1, str2);
        }
        public void Revert()
        {
            this.String1 = this.MyMemento.string1;
            this.String2 = this.MyMemento.string2;
        }
    }
    
    //Memento object
    public class Memento
    {
        public readonly string string1;
        public readonly string string2;

        public Memento(string str1, string str2)
        {
            string1 = str1;
            string2 = str2;
        }
    }

External links