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Basic contract and abstract implementation of the specification pattern.

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Specimen

Build status NuGet

Basic contract and abstract implementation of the specification pattern.

Installation

Specimen can be installed using the NuGet command line or the NuGet Package Manager in Visual Studio.

PM> Install-Package Specimen

Example

First, you will need to add the following using statement:

using Specimen;

Creating specification classes

To create your own specification classes, there are 2 options:

  • Implement the ISpecification<T> interface:
public class PositiveIntegerSpecification : ISpecification<int> 
{
    public Expression<Func<int, bool>> Predicate => value => value > 0;
    
    public bool IsSatisfiedBy(int value)
    {
        // Ideally the compiled expression should be cached
        var compiled = this.Predicate.Compile();
        return compiled(value);
    }
}

public class GreaterThanSpecification : ISpecification<int> 
{
    private readonly int threshold int;
    
    public LargerThanSpecification(int threshold)
    {
        this.threshold = threshold;
    }

    public Expression<Func<int, bool>> Predicate => value => value > this.threshold;
    
    public bool IsSatisfiedBy(int value)
    {
        // Ideally the compiled expression should be cached
        var compiled = this.Predicate.Compile();
        return compiled(value);
    }
}

public class MultipleOfSpecification : ISpecification<int> 
{
    private readonly int baseNumber int;
    
    public MultipleOfSpecification(int baseNumber)
    {
        this.baseNumber = baseNumber;
    }

    public Expression<Func<int, bool>> Predicate => value => value % this.baseNumber == 0;
    
    public bool IsSatisfiedBy(int value)
    {
        // Ideally the compiled expression should be cached
        var compiled = this.Predicate.Compile();
        return compiled(value);
    }
}
  • Extend the SpecificationBase<T> abstract class:
public class PositiveIntegerSpecification : SpecificationBase<int> 
{
    public override Expression<Func<int, bool>> Predicate => value => value > 0;
}

public class GreaterThanSpecification : SpecificationBase<int> 
{
    private readonly int threshold int;
    
    public LargerThanSpecification(int threshold)
    {
        this.threshold = threshold;
    }

    public override Expression<Func<int, bool>> Predicate => value => value > this.threshold;
}

public class MultipleOfSpecification : ISpecification<int> 
{
    private readonly int baseNumber int;
    
    public MultipleOfSpecification(int baseNumber)
    {
        this.baseNumber = baseNumber;
    }

    public override Expression<Func<int, bool>> Predicate => value => value % this.baseNumber == 0;
}

The SpecificationBase<T> class already implements the ISpecification<T>#IsSatisfiedBy method in a cache-aware manner.

Logical operators

Logical operations like negation, conjunction (AND) and disjunction (OR) can be applied on ISpecification<T> instances as follows:

Negation

var positive = new PositiveIntegerSpecification();

var negativeOrZero = positive.Negate();

Assert(negativeOrZero.IsSatisfiedBy(-10));
Assert(negativeOrZero.IsSatisfiedBy(-5));
Assert(negativeOrZero.IsSatisfiedBy(0));
Assert(negativeOrZero.IsSatisfiedBy(5)); // Raises error

Conjunction

var positive = new PositiveIntegerSpecification();
var multipleOfTwo = new MultipleOfSpecification(2);
var largerThanFive = new GreaterThanSpecification(5);

var positiveMultipleOfTwoLargerThanFive = positive.And(multipleOfTwo, largerThanFive);

Assert(positiveMultipleOfTwoLargerThanFive.IsSatisfiedBy(-10)); // Raises error
Assert(positiveMultipleOfTwoLargerThanFive.IsSatisfiedBy(0)); // Raises error
Assert(positiveMultipleOfTwoLargerThanFive.IsSatisfiedBy(15)); // Raises error
Assert(positiveMultipleOfTwoLargerThanFive.IsSatisfiedBy(20));
Assert(positiveMultipleOfTwoLargerThanFive.IsSatisfiedBy(25)); // Raises error

Disjunction

var positive = new PositiveIntegerSpecification();
var multipleOfTwo = new MultipleOfSpecification(2);
var largerThanFive = new GreaterThanSpecification(5);

var positiveMultipleOfTwoLargerThanFive = positive.Or(multipleOfTwo, largerThanFive);

Assert(positiveMultipleOfTwoLargerThanFive.IsSatisfiedBy(-10)); // Raises error
Assert(positiveMultipleOfTwoLargerThanFive.IsSatisfiedBy(0)); // Raises error
Assert(positiveMultipleOfTwoLargerThanFive.IsSatisfiedBy(15));
Assert(positiveMultipleOfTwoLargerThanFive.IsSatisfiedBy(20));
Assert(positiveMultipleOfTwoLargerThanFive.IsSatisfiedBy(25));

Working with LINQ

Support for LINQ expressions/functions is provided by the library, allowing to use ISpecification<T> instances as inpuf of Where invocations:

var source = new []{-10, 5, 0, -5, 20 };
var positive = new PositiveIntegerSpecification();

var filtered = source.Where(positive); // Yields [5, 20]

Assert(positiveMultipleOfTwoLargerThanFive.Count() == 2);

Other projects

Check out some of my other C# projects: