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Mixin is a feature available in some object oriented programming languages. A Mixin can store one method or a combination of methods from various classes, allowing easy sharing and reuse of common code among otherwise unrelated classes.

When a Mixin has all the methods from the combined classes, it is equivalent to multiple inheritance, thus providing a workaround in languages where it is not supported. This feature avoids the ambiguity that multiple inheritance can cause (the "diamond problem") and is also helpful when only a part of a class implementation needs to be shared instead of inheriting the entire class.

History
Mixins first appeared in the Symbolics' object-oriented Flavors system (developed by Howard Cannon), which was an approach to object-orientation used in Lisp Machine Lisp. The name was inspired by Steve's Ice Cream Parlor in Somerville, Massachusetts: The owner of the ice cream shop offered a basic flavor of ice cream (vanilla, chocolate, etc.) and blended in a combination of extra items (nuts, cookies, fudge, etc.) and called the item a "Mix-in", his own trademarked term at the time.

Description
‘Mixins’ are a language concept, that allows you to inject some code into a class. Mixin programming is a style of software development, in which units of functionality are created in a class and then mixed in with other classes.

A Mixin class acts as the parent class, containing the desired functionality. A subclass can then inherit or simply reuse this functionality, but not as a means of specialization. Typically, the Mixin will export the desired functionality to a child class, without creating a rigid, single “is a” relationship. Here lies the important difference between the concepts of Mixins and inheritance, in that the child class can still inherit all the features of the parent class, but the semantics about the child "being a kind of" the parent need not be necessarily applied.

Advantages

 * Code Re-usability: Mixins are perfect when one wants to share functionality between different classes. Instead of repeating the same code over and over again, one can simply group the common functionality into a Mixin and then inherit it into each class that requires it.


 * Mixins provide a mechanism for multiple inheritance as methods from different classes can be clubbed into a single class (the Mixin itself) and then be implemented by a new class.


 * Mixins allow one to inherit and use only the desired features and not necessarily all of the features from the parent class.


 * The concept of Mixins can be used in languages where multiple inheritance is not supported.

Implementations
In Simula, classes are defined in a block in which attributes, methods and class initialization are all defined together; thus all the methods that can be invoked on a class are defined together, and the definition of the class is complete.

In Flavors, a Mixin is a class from which another class can inherit slot definitions and methods. The Mixin usually does have direct instances. Since a Flavor can inherit from more than one other Flavor, it can inherit from one or more Mixins. Note that the original Flavors did not use generic functions.

In New Flavors (a successor of Flavors) and CLOS, methods are organized in "generic functions". These generic functions are functions that are defined in multiple cases (methods) by class dispatch and method combinations.

CLOS and Flavors allow Mixin methods to add behavior to existing methods:  and   daemons, whoppers and wrappers in Flavors. CLOS added  methods and the ability to call shadowed methods via CALL-NEXT-METHOD. So, for example, a stream-lock-mixin can add locking around existing methods of a stream class. In Flavors one would write a wrapper or a whopper and in CLOS one would use an  method. Both CLOS and Flavors allow the computed reuse via method combinations. ,  and   methods are a feature of the standard method combination. Other method combinations are provided.

An example is the  method combination, where the results of all applicable methods of a generic function are added to compute the return value. This is used, for example, with the border-mixin for graphical objects. A graphical object may have a generic width function. The border-mixin would add a border around an object and has a method computing its width. A new class  (that is both a graphical object and uses the   Mixin) would compute its width by calling all applicable width methods—via the   method combination. All return values are added and create the combined width of the object.

In an OOPSLA 90 paper, Gilad Bracha and William Cook reinterpret different inheritance mechanisms found in Smalltalk, Beta and CLOS as special forms of a Mixin inheritance.

Programming languages that use Mixins
Other than Flavors and CLOS (a part of Common Lisp), some languages that use Mixins are:
 * Ada (by extending an existing tagged record with arbitrary operations in a generic)
 * Cobra
 * ColdFusion (Class based using includes and Object based by assigning methods from one object to another at runtime)
 * Curl (with Curl RTE)
 * D (called "template mixins"; D also includes a "mixin" statement that compiles strings as code.)
 * Dart
 * Factor
 * Groovy
 * JavaScript Delegation - Functions as Roles (Traits and Mixins)
 * Perl5's Roles in Moose
 * PHP's "traits"
 * Python
 * Racket (mixins documentation)
 * Ruby
 * Scala
 * XOTcl/TclOO (object systems for Tcl)

Some languages do not support Mixins on the language level, but can easily mimic them by copying methods from one object to another at runtime, thereby "borrowing" the Mixin's methods. This is also possible with statically typed languages, but it requires constructing a new object with the extended set of methods.

Other languages that do not support Mixins can support them in a round-about way via other language constructs. C# and Visual Basic .NET support the addition of extension methods on interfaces, meaning any class implementing an interface with extension methods defined will have the extension methods available as pseudo-members.

In Common Lisp
Common Lisp provides Mixins in CLOS (Common Lisp Object System) similar to Flavors.

is a generic function with one argument and is using the  method combination. The  method combination determines that all applicable methods for a generic function will be called and the results will be added.

is a class with one slot for the button text.

There is a method for objects of class button that computes the width based on the length of the button text. is the method qualifier for the method combination of the same name.

A  class. The naming is just a convention. No superclasses. No slots.

There is a method computing the width of the border. Here it is just 4.

is a class inheriting from both  and.

We can now compute the width of a button. Calling  computes 80. The result is the result of the single applicable method: the method  for the class.

We can also compute the width of a. Calling  computes 84. The result is the sum of the results of the two applicable methods: the method  for the class   and the method   for the class.

In Python
In Python, the  module has both a   class and a   class. They act as servers for UDP and TCP socket servers, respectively. Additionally, there are two Mixin classes:  and. Normally, all new connections are handled within the same process. By extending  with the   as follows:

the  class adds functionality to the TCP server such that each new connection creates a new thread. Alternatively, using the  would cause the process to be forked for each new connection. Clearly, the functionality to create a new thread or fork a process is not terribly useful as a stand-alone class.

In this usage example, the Mixins provide alternative underlying functionality without affecting the functionality as a socket server.

In Javascript
It is technically possible to add behavior to an object by binding functions to keys in the object. However, this lack of separation between state and behavior has drawbacks - a. It intermingles properties of the model domain with that of implementation domain. b. No sharing of common behaviour. Metaobjects solve this problem by separating the domain specific properties of objects from their behaviour specific properties.

The  function (copies all of the functionality from a source object, to a destination object, attributes, functions, etc) is used to mix the behavior in:

In Ruby
Most of the Ruby world is based around Mixins via. The concept of Mixins is implemented in Ruby by the keyword  to which we pass the name of the module as parameter.

Example:

In other languages
In the Curl web-content language, multiple inheritance is used as classes with no instances may implement methods. Common Mixins include all skinnable s inheriting from , user interface delegate objects that require dropdown menus inheriting from StandardBaseDropdownUI and such explicitly named Mixin classes as  ,   and   class. Version 7.0 added library access so that Mixins do not need to be in the same package or be public abstract. Curl constructors are factories that facilitates using multiple-inheritance without explicit declaration of either interfaces or Mixins.

Interfaces and traits
Java 8 introduces a new feature in the form of default methods for interfaces. Basically it allows a method to be defined in an interface with application in the scenario when a new method is to be added to an interface after the interface class programming setup is done. To add a new function to the interface means to implement the method at every class which uses the interface. Default methods help in this case where they can be introduced to an interface any time and have an implemented structure which is then used by the associated classes. Hence default methods adds a possibility of applying the concept in a Mixin sort of a way.

Interfaces combined with aspect-oriented programming can also produce full-fledged Mixins in languages that support such features, such as C# or Java. Additionally, through the use of the marker interface pattern, generic programming, and extension methods, C# 3.0 has the ability to mimic Mixins. With C# 3.0 came the introduction of Extension Methods[2] and they can be applied, not only to classes but, also, to interfaces. Extension Methods provide additional functionality on an existing class without modifying the class. It then becomes possible to create a static helper class for specific functionality that defines the extension methods. Because the classes implement the interface (even if the actual interface doesn’t contain any methods or properties to implement) it will pick up all the extension methods also.

ECMAScript (in most cases implemented as JavaScript) does not need to mimic object composition by stepwise copying fields from one object to another. It natively supports Trait and Mixin based object composition via function objects that implement additional behavior and then are delegated via   or   to objects that are in need of such new functionality.

In Scala

Scala has a rich type system and Traits are a part of Scala’s type system which help implement Mixin behavior. As their name reveals, Traits are usually used to represent a distinct feature or aspect that is normally orthogonal to the responsibility of a concrete type or at least of a certain instance. Eg. Modelling the ability to sing as such an orthogonal feature: it could be applied to Birds, Persons, etc.

Here, Bird has mixed in all methods of the trait into its own definition as if class Bird would have defined method sing on its own.

As  is also used to inherit from a super-class, in case of a trait   is used if no super-class is inherited and only for Mixin in the first trait. All following traits are mixed in using keyword.

Scala allows to mix in a trait dynamically when creating a new instance of a class. In case of a Person class instance, not all instances can sing. This feature comes use then: