Visitor
Applicability
Use the Visitor pattern when
-
an object structure contains many classes of objects with differing
interfaces, and you want to perform operations on these objects that
depend on their concrete classes.
-
many distinct and unrelated operations need to be performed on objects
in an object structure, and you want to avoid ``polluting'' their
classes with these operations. Visitor lets you keep related operations
together by defining them in one class. When the object structure is
shared by many applications, use Visitor to put operations in just those
applications that need them.
-
the classes defining the object structure rarely change, but you often
want to define new operations over the structure. Changing the object
structure classes requires redefining the interface to all visitors,
which is potentially costly. If the object structure classes change
often, then it's probably better to define the operations in those
classes.