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As one of the latest advanced techniques emerged from |
49 |
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object-oriented community, design patterns were applied in some of |
50 |
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the modern scientific software applications, such as JMol, OOPSE |
51 |
< |
\cite{Meineke05} and PROTOMOL \cite{} \textit{etc}. |
51 |
> |
\cite{Meineke05} and PROTOMOL \cite{Matthey05} \textit{etc}. |
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|
53 |
+ |
\subsection{\label{appendixSection:singleton}Singleton} |
54 |
+ |
The Singleton pattern ensures that only one instance of a class is |
55 |
+ |
created. All objects that use an instance of that class use the same |
56 |
+ |
instance. |
57 |
+ |
|
58 |
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\subsection{\label{appendixSection:factoryMethod}Factory Method} |
59 |
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The Factory Method pattern is a creational pattern which deals with |
60 |
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the problem of creating objects without specifying the exact class |
74 |
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|
75 |
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\subsection{\label{appendixSection:templateMethod}Template Method} |
76 |
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|
72 |
– |
|
77 |
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\section{\label{appendixSection:analysisFramework}Analysis Framework} |
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79 |
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\section{\label{appendixSection:hierarchy}Hierarchy} |