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Facts about State Machines
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==========================
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Jump to: [Introduction](#introduction) | [Fundamentals](#fundamentals) | [Intermediate](#intermediate)
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| [Statecharts](#statecharts) | [Implementation](#implementation) | [Advanced](#advanced)
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## *Introduction*
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### I hold the opinion that state machines are often misunderstood and under-applied
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And that's why I wrote this. The goal of this list of facts is not to teach
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you what state machines are or how to use them; there are plenty of other resources for that.
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Rather, the goal here is to motivate their usage and to highlight things about
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them that are frequently overlooked, but nonetheless relevant.
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If you are reading one of these facts and deem it trivial, or irrelevant, or
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unsubstantiated, or, or, ... then I encourage you to just move on to the next one
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in the hopes that you will find it more edifying.
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## *Fundamentals*
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### State machines are ubiquitous
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They're all over the place. Think of all the web apps, all the electronic devices,
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all the household appliances, all the industrial machines that people interact with
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every day. For each one of them, we can formulate a state machine that describes
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its reactive behaviour with a great degree of precision.
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### A state machine is not a state machine diagram
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A state machine is an abstract object -- a concept. A state machine diagram
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is a depiction of that abstract object. Much like how the same number can be
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equally well represented by a numeral (like "5") or a word (like "five"), the
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same state machine can have multiple representations, different but equivalent.
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### A state machine diagram is like a *map* of a system's reactive behaviour
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It is like a map because, for a given state, you can see what transitions are
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allowed into and out of that state. You can see the paths by which the system
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"travels" from one state to another, as well as seeing where there are no paths.
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Just like a map, it doesn't have to (and probably shouldn't) contain every single
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detail. It needs only enough detail to allow you to orient yourself efficiently.
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### A state machine is like a board game, and the diagram is like the board
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You can imagine you have a counter, and it's sitting on one of the squares
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(states) on the board. You draw a card, and written on it is a word (an input).
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Now, if there's an arrow going out from your square
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that is labelled with that word, you slide your counter along it, moving
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it to a new square. But if there's no such arrow going out of your square,
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your counter stays where it is.
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### State machine diagrams can be read by non-technical stakeholders
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Maps and board games are everyday things, so I hope the previous two metaphors
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convince you that just about anyone, technically-minded or not, can grasp the
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basic functioning of a state machine.
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A non-technical stakeholder might still find a large diagram intimidating,
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of course. But by splitting a diagram into smaller diagrams,
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or by reducing a diagram to a simpler diagram by leaving out details,
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you can ease the reader into the structure of the reactive behaviour of the system.
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### A state machine diagram allows reasoning about the system's reactive behaviour
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If you are given a starting state and series of inputs, you can plot a
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course through the state machine diagram and see what state you end up
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in, and what actions occurred along the way. By comparing this with your
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intuition, or with reports of how the actual system actually behaves
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(or specifications for how it _should_ actually behave), you can pinpoint where
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changes need to be made.
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### A state machine diagram allows reasoning about proposed modifications
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Suppose we want to introduce a new operation into our system. If we did,
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what would happen in existing states when the events associated with that new
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operation occur? What _should_ happen? Will new states need to be added
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to capture what is going on with these events? And how will those states
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relate to existing states?
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### State machines can be used for specification
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A state machine diagram, presented prescriptively, establishes
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the reactive behaviour that your system _should_ have. The code itself can only
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describe the behaviour that your system _does_ have. The only way to
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decide if the exhibited behaviour is correct, is to compare it to the
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behaviour it _should_ have. This is the idea of having a specification.
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### State machines can be used to model user interfaces
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Having heard somewhat uninformed statements like "I thought state machines
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were only for physical devices" or "User interfaces aren't suitable for
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modelling with state machines", which are plainly false, I feel I should
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point this out.
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In fact, there is an entire book about designing UIs using Statecharts,
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[Constructing the User Interface with Statecharts (Horrocks, 1999)](https://archive.org/details/isbn_9780201342789)
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(archive.org, borrowable online.)
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It is noted in the book that using the Statecharts notation
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([see below](#statecharts)) rather than a
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flat state diagram will be helpful (virtually necessary) to address the
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complexity found in most user interfaces.
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### Most state machines are simple
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A compiler, for example, has trivial reactive behaviour. Diagramming
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its state machine might not be the best use of your time.
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But even simple state machines are sometimes worth working out as
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diagrams, simply to confirm that they _are_ simple, and in exactly what way.
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### A complex state machine means your system has complex behaviour
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And anything interfacing with this system -- such as a human using it -- will face this
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complexity, and the cost of this complexity. This may prompt you to review the
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behaviour. Maybe the complexity is inherent... or maybe it can be simplified.
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### Working out a state machine helps you understand your system's reactive behaviour
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You won't get it right on the first try, and probably not the second or third try
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either. But each time you revise it, you'll learn something important about how
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your system behaves.
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### Studying a state machine can help you simplify the design of the system
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To reduce the complexity of the system, you should eliminate complex things, like
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concurrency and complex state interactions, where-ever you can. Going through the state
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machine diagram will help you understand where complex state interactions occur,
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and may help you work out where they are actually needed, and where they could be
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eliminated.
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### Understanding a state machine will help you formulate useful tests
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An arrow shows a transition that can happen when an input occurs. What states can it
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happen from? We can look at the state machine diagram and answer that. Now,
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what about those _other_ states -- what should happen when the input occurs in those states?
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What _does_ happen? Test cases can be formulated to cover these possibilities.
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## *Intermediate*
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### State machines and finite automata are two different things
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While similar in structure, the two are quite different in practice.
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Finite automata (sometimes also called "finite state machines") are formally
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defined abstractions in [automata theory](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Automata_theory) (Wikipedia).
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They are able to recognize some formal languages and not able to recognize
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others, and they have practical applications in software, for example in
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pattern matching in text documents.
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A state machine, on the other hand, is a system design concept that originated
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in [electrical engineering](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electrical_engineering) (Wikipedia.) It relates the
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states of a system by the possible transitions between them; those transitions are
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triggered by inputs received from external sources. The inputs are received at
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(nominally) different times. Making a transition, or arriving in or leaving a state,
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may be guarded by a condition, and may trigger an action of some kind as a side-effect.
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There is no pre-set constraint on the kinds of actions such a transition may trigger.
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### The phrase "finite state" can be misleading and can be avoided
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While a state machine typically does indeed have a finite and fixed number of _states_,
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there is no set limit on the amount of _state_ that may be associated with the machine.
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That state typically includes counters, timers, buffers, data stores, and so forth.
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It might help to note that the word "states" is what's called in English a _count noun_
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(like "pennies"), while the word "state" is a _mass noun_ (like "water").
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Some terminology that has been proposed to make this distinction clearer includes
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calling the finite set of states the "control state" and everything else the
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"extended state". Considering both of these together is sometimes called
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"the state of the system".
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The term "state machine" is now commonplace; you don't have to qualify it with
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"finite". System designers will usually understand what you mean when you say
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"state machine".
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### The "states" of the machine refer to the _modes_ of the system
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There's a good argument to be made that the word "mode" would be a better
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choice than the word "state" for referring to a member of the finite set of
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control states.
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If you ask yourself, "What modes can this system be in?", you'll likely
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find that the answer coincides with the set of states of the state machine.
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It's also consistent with the fact that this set is finite: it's
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difficult to imagine a system with an infinite number of "modes".
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But a terminology shift of this magnitude is unlikely to happen anytime
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soon. Everyone knows them as "state machines", and calling them
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"mode machines" just wouldn't catch on.
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### "States" are often qualitative while "state" is often quantitative
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It's also been noted that the finite set of states tends to describe the
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_qualitative_ state of the system, while the "extended" state tends to be
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_quantitative_ in nature (counters and such).
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### Being in exactly one state at any given time is helpful for reasoning
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This quality of _mutual exclusion_ is very helpful when reasoning about
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the behaviour of a state machine because, if the machine is in (for
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example) the "waiting" state, you immediately also know that it is
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_not_ in the "ready" state, and _not_ in the "rejected" state, and...
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and so forth, for all other states.
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### ...but the set of states need not be disjoint
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Although it is very, very useful for reasoning about reactive behaviour
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(see previous fact), it's not gospel. The Statecharts paper (Harel, 1986)
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([see below](#statecharts)) gives an
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example of a diagram that shows two partially overlapping states
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in Figure 41.
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### A state machine diagram is not a flowchart
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A flowchart is "self-propelled"; the transition that is followed out of a
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decision point is determined solely by the decision made inside the decision point.
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In a state machine, though, the triggers that cause the transitions are generally
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_external_ to the system. (It's _re_ active, remember.)
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### ...but you can incorporate some flowchart elements in a state diagram
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Sometimes it happens that an input causes a transition, but the ultimate
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destination of that transition is not solely determined by the input; one
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or more decisions have to be made in order to select the state to which
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the machine will ultimately transition. This can be captured with
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multiple arrows between the same two states, with different conditions on
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each arrow; or with "empty" states that don't represent states so much as
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they represent decision points. But there are valid objections
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to both of these approaches -- the conditions can be complex, and the
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"empty" states are artificial. So there really is a case to be made that
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decision points, like the diamond boxes from a flowchart, can be used in
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a state machine diagram, when using them would make the behaviour clearer.
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This should be recognized as being an advanced technique, however.
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### A state machine does not specify the means by which the inputs are communicated
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That is to say, there is no requirement that the inputs of the
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state machine are messages sent directly to the state machine.
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The state machine could be "listening for" and reacting to broadcast
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events that other systems are reacting to as well.
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Also, if you have two state machines sending messages to each other,
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the question of whether those messages reside on a queue while in transit,
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or any other detail of the implementation of their conveyance, is really
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not in the scope of the state machine design itself.
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### Inputs are always defined at some level of abstraction
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For example, _mouse button depressed_ and _menu item selected_ are both events,
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but the latter is at a higher level of abstraction than the former; indeed,
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pressing the mouse button down may be one way of selecting a menu item
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(while there might also be other ways, such as using keyboard navigation).
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A state machine can exist at any level of abstraction, but typically exists
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only at that one level; events from other levels usually need not be considered
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in its design.
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### State transitions are atomic
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There's a simple proof by _reductio ad absurdum_ for this one: if state transitions
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_weren't_ atomic, then you could introduce another state in the state diagram
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that describes the intermediate state -- the state of the system while the transition
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is taking place. And, naturally, you would have transitions into and out of that
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intermediate state. But then, what would be stopping you from introducing
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further intermediate states for _those_ transitions, and for the transitions into
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those further intermediate states... and so on unendingly? It would be an infinite
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regress. Therefore -- at the level of abstraction that the state machine is dealing
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with -- transitions between states must be atomic.
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### State machines can also describe lifecycles of objects
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Traditionally, the subject of a state machine diagram is some kind of interactive
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system, but many other kinds of objects undergo state transitions over time as well.
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These tend to be on longer timescales. For instance, a loan application
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might be in one of the following states at any given time: being filled out,
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submitted and waiting for evaluation, in evaluation, accepted, or rejected.
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### Lifecycles tend towards linear, interactive systems tend towards cyclic
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This should be apparent from the word "life", which implies birth and
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death.
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Often, state machine diagrams have distinguished notation for
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"start state" and "end state". These apply more strongly
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to a lifecycle of an object than to an interactive system, where
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the concept can be somewhat subjective. (Is the start state of
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a cardboard box the open state or the closed state?)
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## *Statecharts*
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### State machines have the potential for combinatorial explosion
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Say you have an array of four on/off switches. Each switch
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can be in 2 possible states. But the array considered as a whole
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can be in 2 times 2 times 2 times 2 (= 16) possible states, and
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each of these states transitions to 4 other states.
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A state diagram that includes all these states and transitions
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would be unwieldy -- more cumbersome than helpful.
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### Combinatorial explosion can be mitigated through nesting and parallelizing
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In the array example above, it's unlikely that a significant number
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of those 16 states have any meaning, in the sense of influencing
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what the next state should be based on a given input. It's likely
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that the states are, for the most part, treated homogeneously. So it
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behooves us to have a notation that captures this, instead of naively
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treating all states equally.
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In the Statecharts notation, for example, the array could be depicted with
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each switch being its own 2-state state machine nested inside an orthogonal
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region (that is, a parallel partition) of a single superstate representing the
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entire array.
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### Statecharts was introduced by David Harel in the 1980's
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The original paper introducing Statecharts can be found here:
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[Statecharts: A Visual Formalism for Complex Systems (Harel, 1987)](https://www.wisdom.weizmann.ac.il/~dharel/SCANNED.PAPERS/Statecharts.pdf) (PDF).
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Statecharts has been a very influential notation for state machine design,
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but continues to be often misunderstood and under-appreciated
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(much like state machines themselves.)
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Major contributions from it are _hierarchically nested states_ and
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_orthogonal regions_ within a superstate.
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### Statecharts was adopted into OMT
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OMT (Object Modelling Technique) was a software engineering methodology
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formulated in the late 1980's. OMT promoted a 3-axis design, consisting of
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structural, functional, and dynamic aspects. For the notation for the dynamic
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aspect, OMT adopted Statecharts. They were originally going to use their
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own tree-based notation for nested states, but decided that Statechart's
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contour-based notation was a better choice. Details can be found in bibliographic
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notes of Section 5 of the book
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[Object-oriented Modeling and Design (Rumbaugh et al, 1991)](https://archive.org/details/objectorientedmo00rumb)
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(archive.org, borrowable online.))
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### Statecharts went on into UML
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UML (Unified Modelling Language) is a set of software engineering practices and notations
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that grew out of the OMT and Booch formalisms. One of the concepts that UML
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provides is the [UML state machine](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UML_state_machine) (Wikipedia),
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which has been strongly influenced by Statecharts, supporting the same
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major contributions: hierarchically nested states and orthogonal (i.e. parallel) regions.
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## *Implementation*
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### There are many ways to implement a state machine
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In the words of SCTV's fictional Mayor Tommy Shanks, "There are so many ways to
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implement a state machine, you could shake a stick at them." The paper
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[The Anthology of the Finite State Machine Design Patterns (Adamczyk, 2003(?))](https://www.hillside.net/plop/plop/plop2003/Papers/Adamczyk-State-Machine.pdf) (PDF)
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lists dozens of such ways (mostly variations on the State Design Pattern).
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Even outside of object-oriented designs, there are a number of choices
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that can be made: to use a lookup table, to switch on state for a
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given input, to switch on input for a given state, to have dedicated
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input code in each state, and so forth.
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### A state machine's implementation can closely resemble its design
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Notwithstanding the previous fact, it is often possible to pick a
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a straightforward implementation method and run with it. With
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prudent software design choices, the conceptual distance between the
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design elements (states, transitions) and the implementation elements
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(states, transitions) will be small.
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This makes state machines all the more attractive because implementing
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one is almost mechanical; and checking the implementation against the
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specification is also made easier.
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(The caveat of using the implementation itself *as* the specification
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still applies, though: the code itself cannot tell you what the code
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*should* do.)
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### There are software libraries for implementing state machines
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You may or may not benefit from using one. Implementing a state
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machine from scratch is not difficult, and it pays to choose
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a software design (see the previous 2 facts) that fits your problem
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space -- which a generic library might not provide. So using a
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library might be less beneficial than you might imagine (certainly
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less beneficial than e.g. a library for reading JPEGs -- something
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that is difficult to implement and doesn't admit so much variation.)
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### The states are often implemented as an enumeration
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Lots of programming languages provide something like this; for example,
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C has an `enum` type, and Haskell has a disjoint sum type (as part of
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algebraic data types). It's a good fit for the finite nature of the
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set of control states; it makes for more readable source code, and
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(in a type-checked setting) can prevent a state index variable from taking
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on illegal value (that is, one that does not represent any state).
|
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||||
### Boolean flag creep introduces impossible states
|
||||
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||||
State machines are sometimes said to be a remedy for architectural decay,
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||||
which means, in part, the tendency for a code base to grow a
|
||||
new boolean flag every time a new condition is identified. Suppose you're
|
||||
writing a user interface. You start with a basic implementation, then you
|
||||
realize you need to wait until some backend service is ready. So you add a flag,
|
||||
`is_ready`. Then you realize some operation might not succeed and you need
|
||||
to signal the user of this. So you add another flag, `is_error`. Now,
|
||||
you have the possibility of *both* of these flags being true. But is that
|
||||
a meaningful situation? Probably it's not. At this point it's best to
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||||
rethink the set of states your user interface can actually be in, and
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||||
formulate an enumeration that matches those states,
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and use that enumeration instead of these individual boolean flags.
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||||
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||||
### You might find that some of the states are "derived states"
|
||||
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||||
Suppose you are writing a billing system. One of the requirements is
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that when a new invoice is created, it has no line items. Another of
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||||
the requirements is that it should not be possible to submit an empty
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invoice.
|
||||
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||||
So in the state machine, "Empty" and "Non-Empty" are modelled as states
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||||
the invoice can be in, and the "submit" input only has an effect in
|
||||
the "Non-Empty" state, where it transitions to "Submitted". This very
|
||||
clearly illustrates the requirements.
|
||||
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||||
But when implementing this state machine, it might not make
|
||||
sense to formulate an enumeration with both "Empty" and "Non-Empty"
|
||||
in it, because these conditions really depend on the number of lines the
|
||||
invoice has -- a quantitative piece of state. They're both instances
|
||||
of a more general state, "Being Edited".
|
||||
|
||||
So this is a case where the implementation could diverge from how
|
||||
the diagram is drawn. Conceptually, "Empty" and "Non-Empty" are
|
||||
distinct states, for clarity, but in the implementation, they are
|
||||
implemented as "derived states" instead of parts of the
|
||||
"enumerated state". Alternately, you could adjust the diagram
|
||||
to have a single state, and have the "submit" transition guarded
|
||||
by the condition "line item count > 0".
|
||||
|
||||
See also "qualitative vs quantitative state", above.
|
||||
|
||||
## *Advanced*
|
||||
|
||||
### Logical statements about state machines can be decided by model checking
|
||||
|
||||
We can establish a set of propositions, where each proposition is true at some
|
||||
states and false at the others. We can then give formulas in temporal logic,
|
||||
such as "there exists at some future a time when p and q will always be true",
|
||||
and run a model-checking process on our state machine to see in which states
|
||||
of our state machine the formula holds.
|
||||
|
||||
For more information of model checking using temporal logic, see, for example,
|
||||
chapter 3 of
|
||||
[Logic in Computer Science (Huth and Ryan, 2000)](https://archive.org/details/logicincomputers0000huth)
|
||||
(archive.org, borrowable online).
|
||||
|
||||
This comes down to the fact that temporal logic is a specialization of _modal logic_;
|
||||
state machines are close relatives of _labelled transition systems_; and
|
||||
modal logics are a natural (or could we say supernatural!) fit with labelled
|
||||
transition systems. For more on this view see, for example,
|
||||
[First Steps in Modal Logic (Popkorn, 1994)](https://archive.org/details/firststepsinmoda0000popk)
|
||||
(archive.org, borrowable online).
|
||||
|
||||
### Nesting state machines enables a kind of modularity
|
||||
|
||||
Suppose, in the spirit of modularity, we want some part of our state
|
||||
machine to be "pluggable": we want to be able to swap it out for an
|
||||
alternate implementation of that part, one that behaves differently
|
||||
in some ways but is still overall compatible with the rest of the state machine.
|
||||
|
||||
For this to work, a modularity boundary must be established around this
|
||||
part. As long as whatever is inside the boundary reacts like everything
|
||||
outside the boundary expects, those insides can be swapped out for other
|
||||
insides that meet the same expectations.
|
||||
|
||||
If those insides have their own reactive behaviour, which they probably
|
||||
do, then the best way to model this is to put the modularity boundary
|
||||
around a single superstate, which has its own substates (basically its
|
||||
own sub-state machine.)
|
||||
|
||||
For this to work, the substates must be "private"; everything outside
|
||||
the modularity boundary must not rely on knowledge of them, lest
|
||||
problems pop up when we try to swap out the superstate with one that
|
||||
has different substates.
|
||||
|
||||
### The "History pseudo-state" can be avoided by use of a convention
|
||||
|
||||
Statecharts defines a "history state" (capital H in a circle).
|
||||
Its is more than a little confusing but, from what I can tell, it is
|
||||
not actually necessary in many situations, especially if one adopts the following
|
||||
default behavior:
|
||||
|
||||
When re-entering a state _s_ that contains substates, the current substate among
|
||||
those substate is the same one that was current when _s_ was previously left.
|
||||
|
||||
If _s_ was never previously left, then one must consult the start state(s) inside
|
||||
_s_ to discover which the current substate.
|
||||
|
||||
So this is sort of a "history by default" approach. _If_ one wished to transition
|
||||
from some outside state into a specific substate of _s_, one may do so by having
|
||||
a transition arrow go, not to _s_, but directly to the desired substate.
|
||||
|
||||
Transitions directly into substates like this can be very
|
||||
useful, but do note they violate the "privacy" requirement of the previous
|
||||
fact, so they work against modularity (which might or might not be a problem,
|
||||
depending on the situation.)
|
||||
|
||||
An alternate approach to account for modularity might be to decorate
|
||||
arrows transitioning to _s_ with side-effects such as "Reset _s_ to its
|
||||
start substate" instead of having them transition to a substate inside _s_.
|
||||
|
||||
### State machines are neither imperative nor functional
|
||||
|
||||
When the machine switches states, did it destructively update the current
|
||||
state of the system, or did it create a new state of the system and switch to
|
||||
that new state? You can implement it either way. The state machine itself
|
||||
doesn't care.
|
||||
|
||||
### State machines demonstrate a weakness of toggling
|
||||
|
||||
Suppose we have bursts of events -- sometimes you don't just get one event,
|
||||
you get a bunch of them. Physical contact switches are like this -- the
|
||||
phenomenon is called "bounce".
|
||||
|
||||
Suppose further that we have 2 states, On and Off, and a "toggle" input that
|
||||
transitions both from On to Off and from Off to On. If it receives a burst
|
||||
of "toggle" inputs, it is not possible to predict which state it will end
|
||||
up in.
|
||||
|
||||
But suppose instead we have 2 inputs, "turn on" and "turn off", each of
|
||||
which transitions from only one state to the other. Now, if we get a
|
||||
burst of "turn on" (resp. "turn off"), we know what state we will always
|
||||
end up in: On (resp Off).
|
||||
|
||||
There are other situations similar to bursts, e.g. simply not being
|
||||
aware of which state you are currently in, so this informs good design.
|
||||
|
Loading…
Reference in a new issue