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Inversion of Control vs Dependency Injection

According to the paper written by Martin Fowler, inversion of control is the principle where the control flow of a program is inverted: instead of the programmer controlling the flow of a program, the external sources (framework, services, other components) take control of it. It's like we plug something into something else. He mentioned an example about EJB 2.0:

For example the Session Bean interface defines ejbRemove, ejbPassivate (stored to secondary storage), and ejbActivate (restored from passive state). You don't get to control when these methods are called, just what they do. The container calls us, we don't call it.

This leads to the difference between framework and library:

Inversion of Control is a key part of what makes a framework different to a library. A library is essentially a set of functions that you can call, these days usually organized into classes. Each call does some work and returns control to the client.

I think, the point of view that DI is IOC, means the dependency of an object is inverted: instead of it controlling its own dependencies, life cycle... something else does it for you. But, as you told me about DI by hands, DI is not necessarily IOC. We can still have DI and no IOC.

However, in this paper (from the pococapsule, another IOC Framework for C/C++), it suggests that because of IOC and DI, the IOC containers and DI frameworks are far more superior to J2EE, since J2EE mixes the framework code into the components, thus not making it Plain Old Java/C++ Object (POJO/POCO).

Inversion of Control Containers other than the Dependency Injection pattern (Archive link)

Additional reading to understand what's the problem with old Component-Based Development Framework, which leads to the second paper above: Why and what of Inversion of Control (Archive link)

My Question: What exactly is IOC and DI? I am confused. Based on pococapsule, IOC is something more significant than just inversion of the control between objects or programmers and frameworks.

Here's a good writeup on the subject, IoC vs DI (Dependency Inject) vs SL (Service Locator): tinyurl.com/kk4be58 - Extract from the url: IoC vs DI (Dependency Injection)? IoC is the general concept where control of flow is Inverted from client code to framework, which “Does something for the client”. SL (Service Locator) and DI (Dependency Injection) are two design patterns stem off from IoC.
To add my two cents, if one is interested in how dependency injection can be helpful in a coffee shop theme, I have written an article on that here: digigene.com/design-patterns/dependency-injection-coffeeshop
Dependency inversion: Depend on abstractions, not on concretions. Inversion of control: Main vs Abstraction, and how the Main is the glue of the systems. These are some good posts talking about this: coderstower.com/2019/03/26/… coderstower.com/2019/04/02/… coderstower.com/2019/04/09/…
read about this deep, It will clear all martinfowler.com/articles/…

Y
Yadunandan Bhat

The Inversion-of-Control (IoC) pattern, is about providing any kind of callback (which "implements" and/or controls reaction), instead of acting ourselves directly (in other words, inversion and/or redirecting control to the external handler/controller).

For example, rather than having the application call the implementations provided by a library (also known as toolkit), a framework calls the implementations provided by the application.

The Dependency-Injection (DI) pattern is a more specific version of IoC pattern, where implementations are passed into an object through constructors/setters/service lookups, which the object will 'depend' on in order to behave correctly.

Every DI implementation can be considered IoC, but one should not call it IoC, because implementing Dependency-Injection is harder than callback (Don't lower your product's worth by using the general term "IoC" instead).

IoC without using DI, for example, would be the Template pattern because the implementation can only be changed through sub-classing.

DI frameworks are designed to make use of DI and can define interfaces (or Annotations in Java) to make it easy to pass in the implementations.

IoC containers are DI frameworks that can work outside of the programming language. In some you can configure which implementations to use in metadata files (e.g. XML) which are less invasive. With some you can do IoC that would normally be impossible like inject an implementation at pointcuts.

See also this Martin Fowler's article.


Thanks for the answer. But the other paper suggests that with IOC, IOC containers are far more superior to EJB, while Martin Fowler suggests that EJB is a typical example of IOC.
EJB management is really a typical example of IoC. You can see it from the fact that the lifecycle of a EJB is managed by the container, not by the programmer. The programmer does not create or destroy an EJB instance because the control is delegated to the server. That is the concept of IoC: the external code controls when your code is called, which is usually the inverse of what its done most of the time.
IoC is a generic term meaning rather than having the application call the methods in a framework, the framework calls implementations provided by the application. Can you explain a it more about this ?
Aka Hollywood principle, 'don't call us, we'll call you'. Leaves the invocation up to the framework rather than the application.
@ImadAlazani, you'd better read through the article that Garrett attached, which is a detailed discussion about inverting the control from application code to framework.
T
Tomasz Jaskuλa

In short, IoC is a much broader term that includes, but is not limited to, DI

The term Inversion of Control (IoC) originally meant any sort of programming style where an overall framework or run-time controlled the program flow

Before DI had a name, people started to refer to frameworks that manage Dependencies as Inversion of Control Containers, and soon, the meaning of IoC gradually drifted towards that particular meaning: Inversion of Control over Dependencies.

Inversion of Control (IoC) means that objects do not create other objects on which they rely to do their work. Instead, they get the objects that they need from an outside source (for example, an xml configuration file).

Dependency Injection (DI) means that this is done without the object intervention, usually by a framework component that passes constructor parameters and set properties.


Seems like IoC is just another term for the Depency Inversion principle, no?
@ToddVance - Yes, I think IoC and DIP are the same thing. DIP and DI are not the same thing. IoC can be done without DI, but DI cannot be done without IoC.
@ToddVance - No, DIP and IoC are not synonyms and are not related.
Ha, that's why I'm here on this thread... "Inversion of Control vs Dependency Injection"
P
Premraj

https://i.stack.imgur.com/oYukX.jpg

IoC (Inversion of Control) :- It’s a generic term and implemented in several ways (events, delegates etc).

DI (Dependency Injection) :- DI is a sub-type of IoC and is implemented by constructor injection, setter injection or Interface injection.

But, Spring supports only the following two types :

Setter Injection Setter-based DI is realized by calling setter methods on the user’s beans after invoking a no-argument constructor or no-argument static factory method to instantiate their bean.

Setter-based DI is realized by calling setter methods on the user’s beans after invoking a no-argument constructor or no-argument static factory method to instantiate their bean.

Constructor Injection Constructor-based DI is realized by invoking a constructor with a number of arguments, each representing a collaborator.Using this we can validate that the injected beans are not null and fail fast(fail on compile time and not on run-time), so while starting application itself we get NullPointerException: bean does not exist. Constructor injection is Best practice to inject dependencies.

Constructor-based DI is realized by invoking a constructor with a number of arguments, each representing a collaborator.Using this we can validate that the injected beans are not null and fail fast(fail on compile time and not on run-time), so while starting application itself we get NullPointerException: bean does not exist. Constructor injection is Best practice to inject dependencies.


it is not correct stating that Spring does not support property injection. It does. And it is a bad practice, I agree.
Spring @Autowired annotation is a way of property injection in my opinion
I think IoC is likely the principle to delegate the object dependency to the higher level , and DI is one of the ways to apply IoC
B
Benny Bottema

DI is a subset of IoC

IoC means that objects do not create other objects on which they rely to do their work. Instead, they get the objects that they need from an outside service (for example, xml file or single app service). 2 implementations of IoC, I use, are DI and ServiceLocator.

DI means the IoC principle of getting dependent object is done without using concrete objects but abstractions (interfaces). This makes all components chain testable, cause higher level component doesn't depend on lower level component, only from the interface. Mocks implement these interfaces.

Here are some other techniques to achieve IoC.


I would not say IoC means not creating objects. When you call not class method directly, but the interface method - this is inversion of control (as in this case caller does not depend on calling code) and it is not related to object creation at all. One more example of IoC are events and delegates
C
CodeFox

IOC (Inversion Of Control): Giving control to the container to get an instance of the object is called Inversion of Control, means instead of you are creating an object using the new operator, let the container do that for you.

DI (Dependency Injection): Way of injecting properties to an object is called Dependency Injection.

We have three types of Dependency Injection:

Constructor Injection Setter/Getter Injection Interface Injection

Spring supports only Constructor Injection and Setter/Getter Injection.


IoC doesn't need a container - that's just a handy way to make it more convenient.
N
NXT

Since all the answers emphasize on theory I would like to demonstrate with an example first approach:

Suppose we are building an application which contains a feature to send SMS confirmation messages once the order has been shipped. We will have two classes, one is responsible for sending the SMS (SMSService), and another responsible for capturing user inputs (UIHandler), our code will look as below:

public class SMSService
{
    public void SendSMS(string mobileNumber, string body)
    {
        SendSMSUsingGateway(mobileNumber, body);
    }

    private void SendSMSUsingGateway(string mobileNumber, string body)
    {
        /*implementation for sending SMS using gateway*/
    }
}

public class UIHandler
{
    public void SendConfirmationMsg(string mobileNumber)
    {
        SMSService _SMSService = new SMSService();
        _SMSService.SendSMS(mobileNumber, "Your order has been shipped successfully!");
    }
}

Above implementation is not wrong but there are few issues: -) Suppose On development environment, you want to save SMSs sent to a text file instead of using SMS gateway, to achieve this; we will end up changing the concrete implementation of (SMSService) with another implementation, we are losing flexibility and forced to rewrite the code in this case. -) We’ll end up mixing responsibilities of classes, our (UIHandler) should never know about the concrete implementation of (SMSService), this should be done outside the classes using “Interfaces”. When this is implemented, it will give us the ability to change the behavior of the system by swapping the (SMSService) used with another mock service which implements the same interface, this service will save SMSs to a text file instead of sending to mobileNumber.

To fix the above issues we use Interfaces which will be implemented by our (SMSService) and the new (MockSMSService), basically the new Interface (ISMSService) will expose the same behaviors of both services as the code below:

public interface ISMSService
{
    void SendSMS(string phoneNumber, string body);
}

Then we will change our (SMSService) implementation to implement the (ISMSService) interface:

public class SMSService : ISMSService
{
    public void SendSMS(string mobileNumber, string body)
    {
        SendSMSUsingGateway(mobileNumber, body);
    }

    private void SendSMSUsingGateway(string mobileNumber, string body)
    {
        /*implementation for sending SMS using gateway*/
        Console.WriteLine("Sending SMS using gateway to mobile: 
        {0}. SMS body: {1}", mobileNumber, body);
    }
}

Now we will be able to create new mock up service (MockSMSService) with totally different implementation using the same interface:

public class MockSMSService :ISMSService
{
    public void SendSMS(string phoneNumber, string body)
    {
        SaveSMSToFile(phoneNumber,body);
    }

    private void SaveSMSToFile(string mobileNumber, string body)
    {
        /*implementation for saving SMS to a file*/
        Console.WriteLine("Mocking SMS using file to mobile: 
        {0}. SMS body: {1}", mobileNumber, body);
    }
}

At this point, we can change the code in (UIHandler) to use the concrete implementation of the service (MockSMSService) easily as below:

public class UIHandler
{
    public void SendConfirmationMsg(string mobileNumber)
    {
        ISMSService _SMSService = new MockSMSService();
        _SMSService.SendSMS(mobileNumber, "Your order has been shipped successfully!");
    }
}

We have achieved a lot of flexibility and implemented separation of concerns in our code, but still we need to do a change on the code base to switch between the two SMS Services. So we need to implement Dependency Injection.

To achieve this, we need to implement a change to our (UIHandler) class constructor to pass the dependency through it, by doing this, the code which uses the (UIHandler) can determine which concrete implementation of (ISMSService) to use:

public class UIHandler
{
    private readonly ISMSService _SMSService;

    public UIHandler(ISMSService SMSService)
    {
        _SMSService = SMSService;
    }

    public void SendConfirmationMsg(string mobileNumber)
    {
        _SMSService.SendSMS(mobileNumber, "Your order has been shipped successfully!");
    }
}

Now the UI form which will talk with class (UIHandler) is responsible to pass which implementation of interface (ISMSService) to consume. This means we have inverted the control, the (UIHandler) is no longer responsible to decide which implementation to use, the calling code does. We have implemented the Inversion of Control principle which DI is one type of it.

The UI form code will be as below:

class Program
{
    static void Main(string[] args)
    {
        ISMSService _SMSService = new MockSMSService(); // dependency

        UIHandler _UIHandler = new UIHandler(_SMSService);
        _UIHandler.SendConfirmationMsg("96279544480");

        Console.ReadLine();
    }
}

Great explanation
Would have been great if you also gave an example of ioc without di. For example a ioc system based on xml
j
jaco0646

Rather than contrast DI and IoC directly, it may be helpful to start from the beginning: every non-trivial application depends on other pieces of code.

So I am writing a class, MyClass, and I need to call a method of YourService... somehow I need to acquire an instance of YourService. The simplest, most straightforward way is to instantiate it myself.

YourService service = new YourServiceImpl();

Direct instantiation is the traditional (procedural) way to acquire a dependency. But it has a number of drawbacks, including tight coupling of MyClass to YourServiceImpl, making my code difficult to change and difficult to test. MyClass doesn't care what the implementation of YourService looks like, so MyClass doesn't want to be responsible for instantiating it.

I'd prefer to invert that responsibility from MyClass to something outside MyClass. The simplest way to do that is just to move the instantiation call (new YourServiceImpl();) into some other class. I might name this other class a Locator, or a Factory, or any other name; but the point is that MyClass is no longer responsible for YourServiceImpl. I've inverted that dependency. Great.

Problem is, MyClass is still responsible for making the call to the Locator/Factory/Whatever. Since all I've done to invert the dependency is insert a middleman, now I'm coupled to the middleman (even if I'm not coupled to the concrete objects the middleman gives me).

I don't really care where my dependencies come from, so I'd prefer not to be responsible for making the call(s) to retrieve them. Inverting the dependency itself wasn't quite enough. I want to invert control of the whole process.

What I need is a totally separate piece of code that MyClass plugs into (call it a framework). Then the only responsibility I'm left with is to declare my dependency on YourService. The framework can take care of figuring out where and when and how to get an instance, and just give MyClass what it needs. And the best part is that MyClass doesn't need to know about the framework. The framework can be in control of this dependency wiring process. Now I've inverted control (on top of inverting dependencies).

There are different ways of connecting MyClass into a framework. Injection is one such mechanism whereby I simply declare a field or parameter that I expect a framework to provide, typically when it instantiates MyClass.

I think the hierarchy of relationships among all these concepts is slightly more complex than what other diagrams in this thread are showing; but the basic idea is that it is a hierarchical relationship. I think this syncs up with DIP in the wild.

https://i.stack.imgur.com/kIUrS.png


This is a terrific answer, @jaco0646.
I like the fact that this answer tackles how Factories fit into all this, and provides a nice overview diagram of the different concepts and how they all relate to each other.
u
user3386493

But the spring documentation says they are same.

http://docs.spring.io/spring/docs/current/spring-framework-reference/htmlsingle/#beans-introduction

In the first line "IoC is also known as dependency injection (DI)".


I guess what they were trying to address is that DI is a very widely used flavour of IoC design pattern that it can almost easily be called IoC aka DI - unless the documentation has any explicit reference that suggest otherwise.
"IoC is also known as dependency injection (DI)" ... horsefeathers!
IoC can be called design principle and DI is its implementation. In Both cases responsibility to manage Objects is transferred to spring container instead so inversion of control.
Because of this statement, the candidate on the interview went bonkers defending this statement, because he didn't have another source of information. Quite misleading...
R
Rahul Gupta

IoC - Inversion of control is generic term, independent of language, it is actually not create the objects but describe in which fashion object is being created.

DI - Dependency Injection is concrete term, in which we provide dependencies of the object at run time by using different injection techniques viz. Setter Injection, Constructor Injection or by Interface Injection.


j
jatin_ghataliya

Inversion of control is a design paradigm with the goal of giving more control to the targeted components of your application, the ones getting the work done. Dependency injection is a pattern used to create instances of objects that other objects rely on without knowing at compile time which class will be used to provide that functionality.

There are several basic techniques to implement inversion of control. These are:

Using a factory pattern

Using a service locator pattern

Using a dependency injection of any given below type: 1). A constructor injection 2). A setter injection 3). An interface injection


A
Amrit

Inversion of Control is a generic design principle of software architecture that assists in creating reusable, modular software frameworks that are easy to maintain.

It is a design principle in which the Flow of Control is "received" from the generic-written library or reusable code.

To understand it better, lets see how we used to code in our earlier days of coding. In procedural/traditional languages, the business logic generally controls the flow of the application and "Calls" the generic or reusable code/functions. For example, in a simple Console application, my flow of control is controlled by my program's instructions, that may include the calls to some general reusable functions.

print ("Please enter your name:");
scan (&name);
print ("Please enter your DOB:");
scan (&dob);

//More print and scan statements
<Do Something Interesting>

//Call a Library function to find the age (common code)
print Age

In Contrast, with IoC, the Frameworks are the reusable code that "Calls" the business logic.

For example, in a windows based system, a framework will already be available to create UI elements like buttons, menus, windows and dialog boxes. When I write the business logic of my application, it would be framework's events that will call my business logic code (when an event is fired) and NOT the opposite.

Although, the framework's code is not aware of my business logic, it will still know how to call my code. This is achieved using events/delegates, callbacks etc. Here the Control of flow is "Inverted".

So, instead of depending the flow of control on statically bound objects, the flow depends upon the overall object graph and the relations between different objects.

Dependency Injection is a design pattern that implements IoC principle for resolving dependencies of objects.

In simpler words, when you are trying to write code, you will be creating and using different classes. One class (Class A) may use other classes (Class B and/or D). So, Class B and D are dependencies of class A.

A simple analogy will be a class Car. A car might depend on other classes like Engine, Tyres and more.

Dependency Injection suggests that instead of the Dependent classes (Class Car here) creating its dependencies (Class Engine and class Tyre), class should be injected with the concrete instance of the dependency.

Lets understand with a more practical example. Consider that you are writing your own TextEditor. Among other things, you can have a spellchecker that provides the user with a facility to check the typos in his text. A simple implementation of such a code can be:

Class TextEditor
{

    //Lot of rocket science to create the Editor goes here

    EnglishSpellChecker objSpellCheck;
    String text;

    public void TextEditor()

    {   

        objSpellCheck = new EnglishSpellChecker();

    }

    public ArrayList <typos> CheckSpellings()
    {

        //return Typos;

    }

}

At first sight, all looks rosy. The user will write some text. The developer will capture the text and call the CheckSpellings function and will find a list of Typos that he will show to the User.

Everything seems to work great until one fine day when one user starts writing French in the Editor.

To provide the support for more languages, we need to have more SpellCheckers. Probably French, German, Spanish etc.

Here, we have created a tightly-coupled code with "English"SpellChecker being tightly coupled with our TextEditor class, which means our TextEditor class is dependent on the EnglishSpellChecker or in other words EnglishSpellCheker is the dependency for TextEditor. We need to remove this dependency. Further, Our Text Editor needs a way to hold the concrete reference of any Spell Checker based on developer's discretion at run time.

So, as we saw in the introduction of DI, it suggests that the class should be injected with its dependencies. So, it should be the calling code's responsibility to inject all the dependencies to the called class/code. So we can restructure our code as

interface ISpellChecker
{

    Arraylist<typos> CheckSpelling(string Text);

}

Class EnglishSpellChecker : ISpellChecker

{

    public override Arraylist<typos> CheckSpelling(string Text)

    {

        //All Magic goes here.

    }

}



Class FrenchSpellChecker : ISpellChecker

{

    public override Arraylist<typos> CheckSpelling(string Text)

    {

        //All Magic goes here.

    }

}

In our example, the TextEditor class should receive the concrete instance of ISpellChecker type.

Now, the dependency can be injected in Constructor, a Public Property or a method.

Lets try to change our class using Constructor DI. The changed TextEditor class will look something like:

Class TextEditor

{

    ISpellChecker objSpellChecker;

    string Text;



    public void TextEditor(ISpellChecker objSC)

    {

        objSpellChecker = objSC;

    }



    public ArrayList <typos> CheckSpellings()

    {

        return objSpellChecker.CheckSpelling();

    }

}

So that the calling code, while creating the text editor can inject the appropriate SpellChecker Type to the instance of the TextEditor.

You can read the complete article here


S
SAMUEL

DI and IOC are two design pattern that mainly focusing on providing loose coupling between components, or simply a way in which we decouple the conventional dependency relationships between object so that the objects are not tight to each other.

With following examples, I am trying to explain both these concepts.

Previously we are writing code like this

Public MyClass{
 DependentClass dependentObject
 /*
  At somewhere in our code we need to instantiate 
  the object with new operator  inorder to use it or perform some method.
  */ 
  dependentObject= new DependentClass();
  dependentObject.someMethod();
}

With Dependency injection, the dependency injector will take care of the instantiation of objects

Public MyClass{
 /* Dependency injector will instantiate object*/
 DependentClass dependentObject

 /*
  At somewhere in our code we perform some method. 
  The process of  instantiation will be handled by the dependency injector
 */ 

  dependentObject.someMethod();
}

The above process of giving the control to some other (for example the container) for the instantiation and injection can be termed as Inversion of Control and the process in which the IOC container inject the dependency for us can be termed as dependency injection.

IOC is the principle where the control flow of a program is inverted: instead of the programmer controlling the flow of a program, program controls the flow by reducing the overhead to the programmer.and the process used by the program to inject dependency is termed as DI

The two concepts work together providing us with a way to write much more flexible, reusable, and encapsulated code, which make them as important concepts in designing object-oriented solutions.

Also Recommend to read.

What is dependency injection?

You can also check one of my similar answer here

Difference between Inversion of Control & Dependency Injection


B
Bruno de Andrade

IOC(Inversion Of Control): Giving control to the container to get instance of object is called Inversion of Control. It means instead of you are creating object using new operator, let the container do that for you.

DI(Dependency Injection): Passing the required parameters(properties) from XML to an object(in POJO CLASS) is called Dependency injection.


K
Kunal

IOC indicates that an external classes managing the classes of an application,and external classes means a container manages the dependency between class of application. basic concept of IOC is that programmer don't need to create your objects but describe how they should be created.

The main tasks performed by IoC container are: to instantiate the application class. to configure the object. to assemble the dependencies between the objects.

DI is the process of providing the dependencies of an object at run time by using setter injection or constructor injection.


a
afshar

IOC - DIP - DI

Inversion of Control (IOC) Dependency Inversion Principle (DIP) Dependency Injection (DI)

1- IOC: abstract principle describing an aspect of some software architecture designs in which the flow of control of a system is inverted in comparison to procedural programming.

2-DIP: is Object Oriented Programming(OOP) principle(D of SOLID).

3-DI: is a software design pattern that implements inversion of control and allows a program design to follow the dependency inversion principle.

https://i.stack.imgur.com/4lsz0.jpg


s
supernova

IOC (Inversion of Control) is basically design pattern concept of removing dependencies and decoupling them to making the flow non-linear , and let the container / or another entity manage the provisioning of dependencies. It actually follow Hollywood principal “Don’t call us we will call you”. So summarizing the differences.

Inversion of control :- It’s a generic term to decouple the dependencies and delegate their provisioning , and this can be implemented in several ways (events, delegates etc).

Dependency injection :- DI is a subtype of IOC and is implemented by constructor injection, setter injection or method injection.

The following article describe this very neatly.

https://www.codeproject.com/Articles/592372/Dependency-Injection-DI-vs-Inversion-of-Control-IO


R
Rich Remer

I think the idea can be demonstrated clearly without getting into Object Oriented weeds, which seem to muddle the idea.

// dependency injection
function doSomething(dependency) {
    // do something with your dependency
}

// in contrast to creating your dependencies yourself
function doSomething() {
    dependency = getDependencySomehow()
}

// inversion of control
application = makeApp(authenticate, handleRequest, sendResponse)
application.run(getRequest())

// in contrast to direct control or a "library" style
application = makeApp()
request = application.getRequest()

if (application.authenticate(request.creds)) {
    response = application.handleRequest(request)
    application.sendResponse(response)
}

If you tilt your head and squint your eyes, you'll see that DI is a particular implementation of IoC with specific concerns. Instead of injecting models and behaviors into an application framework or higher-order operation, you are injecting variables into a function or object.


y
yoAlex5

DIP vs DI vs IoC

[Dependency Inversion Principle(DIP)] is a part of SOLID[About] which ask you to use abstraction instead of realizations

Dependency Injection(DI) - use Aggregation instead of Composition[About] In this case external object is responsible for logic inside. Which allows you to have more dynamic and testable approach

class A {
  B b

  //injecting B via constructor 
  init(b: B) {
     self.b = b
  }
}

Inversion of Control(IoC) very high level definition which is more about control flow. The best example is Inversion of Control(IoC) Container or Framework[About]. For example GUI which is Framework where you don't have a control, everything which you can do is just implement Framework's interface which will be called when some action is happend in the Framework. So control is shifted from your application into the Framework being used

DIP + DI

class A {
  IB ib

  init(ib: IB) {
     self.ib = ib
  }
}

Also you can achieve it using:

[Factory Method]

[Service Locator]

[IoC-container(framework)]

More complex example

Dependency rule in multi layer/module structure

Pseudocode:

interface InterfaceInputPort {
    func input()
}

interface InterfaceOutputPort {
    func output()
}

class A: InterfaceOutputPort {

    let inputPort = B(outputPort: self)

    func output() {
        print("output")
    }
}

class B: InterfaceInputPort {
    let outputPort: InterfaceOutputPort

    init(outputPort: InterfaceOutputPort) {
        self.outputPort = outputPort
    }

    func input() {
        print("input")
    }
}


C
Community

Let's begin with D of SOLID and look at DI and IoC from Scott Millett's book "Professional ASP.NET Design Patterns":

Dependency Inversion Principle (DIP) The DIP is all about isolating your classes from concrete implementations and having them depend on abstract classes or interfaces. It promotes the mantra of coding to an interface rather than an implementation, which increases flexibility within a system by ensuring you are not tightly coupled to one implementation. Dependency Injection (DI) and Inversion of Control (IoC) Closely linked to the DIP are the DI principle and the IoC principle. DI is the act of supplying a low level or dependent class via a constructor, method, or property. Used in conjunction with DI, these dependent classes can be inverted to interfaces or abstract classes that will lead to loosely coupled systems that are highly testable and easy to change. In IoC, a system’s flow of control is inverted compared to procedural programming. An example of this is an IoC container, whose purpose is to inject services into client code without having the client code specifying the concrete implementation. The control in this instance that is being inverted is the act of the client obtaining the service.

Millett,C (2010). Professional ASP.NET Design Patterns. Wiley Publishing. 7-8.


V
Vaibs

//ICO , DI ,10 years back , this was they way:

public class  AuditDAOImpl implements Audit{

    //dependency
    AuditDAO auditDAO = null;
        //Control of the AuditDAO is with AuditDAOImpl because its creating the object
    public AuditDAOImpl () {
        this.auditDAO = new AuditDAO ();
    }
}

Now with Spring 3,4 or latest its like below

public class  AuditDAOImpl implements Audit{

    //dependency

     //Now control is shifted to Spring. Container find the object and provide it. 
    @Autowired
    AuditDAO auditDAO = null;

}

Overall the control is inverted from old concept of coupled code to the frameworks like Spring which makes the object available. So that's IOC as far as I know and Dependency injection as you know when we inject the dependent object into another object using Constructor or setters . Inject basically means passing it as an argument. In spring we have XML & annotation based configuration where we define bean object and pass the dependent object with Constructor or setter injection style.


S
Sachindra N. Pandey

I found best example on Dzone.com which is really helpfull to understand the real different between IOC and DI

“IoC is when you have someone else create objects for you.” So instead of writing "new " keyword (For example, MyCode c=new MyCode())in your code, the object is created by someone else. This ‘someone else’ is normally referred to as an IoC container. It means we handover the rrsponsibility (control )to the container to get instance of object is called Inversion of Control., means instead of you are creating object using new operator, let the container do that for you.

   DI(Dependency Injection):  Way of injecting properties to an object is 
   called 
  Dependency injection.
   We have three types of Dependency injection
    1)  Constructor Injection
    2)  Setter/Getter Injection
    3)  Interface Injection
   Spring will support only Constructor Injection and Setter/Getter Injection.

Read full article IOC and Read Full article DI


A
Abhishek

1) DI is Child->obj depends on parent-obj. The verb depends is important. 2) IOC is Child->obj perform under a platform. where platform could be school, college, dance class. Here perform is an activity with different implication under any platform provider.

practical example: `

//DI
child.getSchool();
//IOC
child.perform()// is a stub implemented by dance-school
child.flourish()// is a stub implemented by dance-school/school/

`

-AB


H
Hearen

As for this question, I'd say the wiki has already provided detailed and easy-understanding explanations. I will just quote the most significant here.

Implementation of IoC

In object-oriented programming, there are several basic techniques to implement inversion of control. These are: Using a service locator pattern Using dependency injection, for example Constructor injection Parameter injection Setter injection Interface injection; Using a contextualized lookup; Using template method design pattern; Using strategy design pattern

As for Dependency Injection

dependency injection is a technique whereby one object (or static method) supplies the dependencies of another object. A dependency is an object that can be used (a service). An injection is the passing of a dependency to a dependent object (a client) that would use it.


F
Fahim Farook

IoC concept was initially heard during the procedural programming era. Therefore from a historical context IoC talked about inversion of the ownership of control-flow i.e. who owns the responsibility to invoke the functions in the desired order - whether it's the functions themselves or should you invert it to some external entity.

However once the OOP emerged, people began to talk about IoC in OOP context where applications are concerned with object creation and their relationships as well, apart from the control-flow. Such applications wanted to invert the ownership of object-creation (rather than control-flow) and required a container which is responsible for object creation, object life-cycle & injecting dependencies of the application objects thereby eliminating application objects from creating other concrete object.

In that sense DI is not the same as IoC, since it's not about control-flow, however it's a kind of Io*, i.e. Inversion of ownership of object-creation.

What is wrong in my way of explainning DI and IoC?