View Problem
OOP

Instantiate object with mutable state

Reimplement the Greeter class so that the 'whom' property or data member remains private but is mutable, and is provided with getter and setter methods. Invoke the setter to change the greetee, invoke 'greet', then use the getter in displaying the line, "I have just greeted {whom}.".

For example, if the greetee is changed to 'Tommy' using the setter, the 'greet' method would display:

Hello, Tommy!

The getter would then be used to display the line:

I have just greeted Tommy.
DiskEdit
fsharp
type Greeter(name:string) =
let mutable whom = name

member this.Whom
with get () = whom
and set v = whom <- v

member this.Greet() =
printfn "Hello, %s!" whom

let greeter = Greeter("World")
greeter.Greet()
greeter.Whom <- "Tommy"
greeter.Greet()
printfn "I have just greeted %s." greeter.Whom
DiskEdit
fantom
class Greeter
{
new make(Str whom) { this.whom = whom }
Void greet() { echo("Hello, $whom!") }
Str whom
}

greeter := Greeter("world")
greeter.greet
greeter.whom = "Tommy"
echo("I have just greeted ${greeter.whom}.")
DiskEdit
groovy
class Greeter {
def whom
def greet() { println "Hello, $whom!" }
}

greeter = new Greeter(whom:"world"); greeter.greet()

greeter.whom = 'Tommy'; greeter.greet()
println "I have just greeted $greeter.whom"
DiskEdit
clojure
(defn greeter [whom]
(atom {:whom whom}))

(defn get-whom [g]
(:whom @g))

(defn set-whom [g whom]
(swap! g #(conj % {:whom whom})))

(defn greet [g]
(println (str "Hello, " (:whom @g) "!")))

; using the "class"
(let [g (greeter "world")]
(greet g)
(set-whom g "Tommy")
(greet g)
(println (str "I have just greeted " (get-whom g) ".")))

; or same effect without using any variables
(println (str "I have just greeted "
(get-whom (doto (greeter "world")
(greet)
(set-whom "Tommy")
(greet)))
"."))

Submit a new solution for fsharp, fantom, groovy, or clojure
There are 11 other solutions in additional languages (cpp, csharp, haskell, java ...)