Sync Decorator to Java 25: H6 file labels, fix Main.java JDK-output mismatch, README mapping
This commit is contained in:
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package decorator;
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/**
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* Decorator Design Pattern — Runnable Demo
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*
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* Shows how text processors can be stacked like Java IO streams.
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* Each decorator adds one behaviour; the order of wrapping matters.
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*
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* Run: javac decorator/*.java && java decorator.Main
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* Article: https://ankurm.com/decorator-design-pattern-java/
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*/
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public class Main {
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public static void main(String[] args) {
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System.out.println("=== Decorator Design Pattern Demo ===\n");
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String input = " hello world, badword is here ";
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System.out.println("Input: \"" + input + "\"");
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System.out.println();
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System.out.println("Input: \"" + input + "\"\n");
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// Stack 1: just trim
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TextProcessor trimOnly = new TrimDecorator(new PlainTextProcessor());
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System.out.println("Trim only: \"" + trimOnly.process(input) + "\"");
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// Stack 2: trim, then upper case
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// Stack 2: trim first (innermost), then uppercase (outermost)
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// Execution order: PlainText → Trim → UpperCase
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TextProcessor trimThenUpper =
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new UpperCaseDecorator(
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new TrimDecorator(
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new PlainTextProcessor()));
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System.out.println("Trim + UpperCase: \"" + trimThenUpper.process(input) + "\"");
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// Stack 3: trim, filter profanity, then upper case
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// Stack 3: trim, filter profanity, then uppercase
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TextProcessor full =
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new UpperCaseDecorator(
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new ProfanityFilterDecorator(
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@@ -37,15 +26,15 @@ public class Main {
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new PlainTextProcessor())));
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System.out.println("Trim + Filter + Upper: \"" + full.process(input) + "\"");
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// Stack 4: different order — filter then trim (order matters!)
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// Stack 4: filter THEN trim — different result because order changed
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TextProcessor filterFirst =
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new TrimDecorator(
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new ProfanityFilterDecorator(
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new PlainTextProcessor()));
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System.out.println("Filter + Trim: \"" + filterFirst.process(input) + "\"");
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System.out.println();
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System.out.println("JDK parallel: new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(socket.getInputStream()))");
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System.out.println("\n--- JDK equivalent ---");
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System.out.println("new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(socket.getInputStream()))");
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System.out.println("Same pattern: each wrapper adds one behaviour, order matters.");
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System.out.println("\n=== Demo complete ===");
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@@ -1,14 +1,12 @@
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package decorator;
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/**
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* Concrete Component — the base object being decorated.
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* Does nothing special: just returns the text as-is.
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* All decorators wrap this (or other decorators on top of it).
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* Concrete Component — the starting point for decoration.
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* Returns text unchanged. Decorators wrap around this
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* and transform the result one layer at a time.
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*/
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public class PlainTextProcessor implements TextProcessor {
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@Override
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public String process(String text) {
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return text; // base: no transformation
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return text; // no transformation — base case
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}
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}
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@@ -1,14 +1,8 @@
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package decorator;
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/** Concrete Decorator 3: replaces bad words with asterisks. */
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/** Concrete Decorator: replaces profane words with asterisks. */
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public class ProfanityFilterDecorator extends TextDecorator {
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private static final String[] BAD_WORDS = {"badword", "spam"};
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public ProfanityFilterDecorator(TextProcessor wrapped) {
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super(wrapped);
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}
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public ProfanityFilterDecorator(TextProcessor wrapped) { super(wrapped); }
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@Override
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public String process(String text) {
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String result = super.process(text);
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32
02-structural/decorator/README.md
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32
02-structural/decorator/README.md
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# Decorator Design Pattern — Java Example
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**Pattern:** Structural → Decorator
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**Article:** https://ankurm.com/decorator-design-pattern-java/
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## What this example shows
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Builds a text-processing pipeline where behaviours (trim, uppercase, profanity filter) are stacked as wrapper objects around a `PlainTextProcessor`, all sharing the `TextProcessor` interface — the same idea behind `new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(...))` in the JDK.
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## How to run
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```bash
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javac decorator/*.java -d out/decorator
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java -cp out/decorator decorator.Main
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```
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Requires Java 25.
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## Post Section ↔ File Mapping
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| Post Section | File(s) |
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|---|---|
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| Step 1 — Component Interface | `TextProcessor.java` |
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| Step 2 — Concrete Component | `PlainTextProcessor.java` |
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| Step 3 — Base Decorator | `TextDecorator.java` |
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| Step 4 — Concrete Decorators | `UpperCaseDecorator.java`, `TrimDecorator.java`, `ProfanityFilterDecorator.java` |
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| Stacking the Decorators — Order Matters | `Main.java` |
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Note: the JDK `InputStream`/`BufferedInputStream`/`GZIPInputStream` snippet under "Decorator in the JDK: I/O Streams" is illustrative only — it is not part of this repository's runnable example.
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Article: https://ankurm.com/decorator-design-pattern-java/
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All patterns: https://ankurm.com/design-patterns-java/
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@@ -1,25 +1,22 @@
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package decorator;
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/**
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* Base Decorator — holds a reference to the wrapped TextProcessor.
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* All concrete decorators extend this instead of implementing
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* TextProcessor directly. This avoids repeating the delegation
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* boilerplate in every decorator.
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* Base Decorator — holds a reference to the wrapped TextProcessor
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* and delegates to it. Concrete decorators extend this class.
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*
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* Crucially: it delegates to the wrapped processor first,
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* then applies its own transformation to the result.
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* Why an abstract class rather than another interface implementation?
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* To avoid repeating the wrapping boilerplate (the field + constructor +
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* delegation call) in every single concrete decorator.
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*/
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public abstract class TextDecorator implements TextProcessor {
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protected final TextProcessor wrapped;
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protected TextDecorator(TextProcessor wrapped) {
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this.wrapped = wrapped;
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}
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@Override
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public String process(String text) {
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// Delegate to the wrapped processor first, then let subclass apply its transform
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// Default: pass through to the wrapped processor.
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// Concrete decorators call super.process(text) to invoke this,
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// then apply their own transformation to the result.
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return wrapped.process(text);
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}
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}
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@@ -1,9 +1,8 @@
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package decorator;
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/**
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* Component interface — defines what all text processors do.
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* Both the concrete processor AND all decorators implement this.
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* This is what makes them stackable.
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* Component — defines what all text processors do.
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* Both the base implementation AND every decorator implement this.
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* Sharing this type is what makes decorators stackable.
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*/
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public interface TextProcessor {
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String process(String text);
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@@ -1,12 +1,7 @@
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package decorator;
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/** Concrete Decorator 2: trims leading/trailing whitespace. */
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/** Concrete Decorator: trims leading and trailing whitespace. */
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public class TrimDecorator extends TextDecorator {
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public TrimDecorator(TextProcessor wrapped) {
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super(wrapped);
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}
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public TrimDecorator(TextProcessor wrapped) { super(wrapped); }
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@Override
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public String process(String text) {
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return super.process(text).trim();
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@@ -1,16 +1,13 @@
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package decorator;
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/** Concrete Decorator 1: converts all text to upper case. */
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/** Concrete Decorator: converts result to upper case. */
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public class UpperCaseDecorator extends TextDecorator {
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public UpperCaseDecorator(TextProcessor wrapped) {
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super(wrapped);
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}
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@Override
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public String process(String text) {
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// Get the result from whatever is below us in the stack,
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// then apply OUR transformation on top of it.
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// 1. Get result from everything below in the stack
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// 2. Apply OUR transformation: uppercase
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return super.process(text).toUpperCase();
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}
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}
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18
README.md
18
README.md
@@ -231,6 +231,24 @@ javac 02-structural/composite/*.java -d out/composite
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java -cp out/composite composite.Main
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```
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### Decorator (`02-structural/decorator/`)
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| Post Section | File(s) |
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|---|---|
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| Step 1 — Component Interface | `TextProcessor.java` |
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| Step 2 — Concrete Component | `PlainTextProcessor.java` |
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| Step 3 — Base Decorator | `TextDecorator.java` |
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| Step 4 — Concrete Decorators | `UpperCaseDecorator.java`, `TrimDecorator.java`, `ProfanityFilterDecorator.java` |
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| Stacking the Decorators — Order Matters | `Main.java` |
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Note: the JDK `InputStream`/`BufferedInputStream`/`GZIPInputStream` snippet is illustrative only — it is not part of this repository's runnable example.
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Run it:
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```bash
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javac 02-structural/decorator/*.java -d out/decorator
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java -cp out/decorator decorator.Main
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```
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## Reference
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- *Design Patterns: Elements of Reusable Object-Oriented Software* — Gamma, Helm, Johnson, Vlissides
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