| name | python-di-soa-patterns |
| description | DI/SOA decision tree with full code examples for Python architecture decisions |
| version | 1.0.0 |
| category | toolchain |
| author | Claude MPM Team |
| license | MIT |
| progressive_disclosure | {"entry_point":{"summary":"Decision tree and code examples for choosing between DI/SOA and lightweight script patterns in Python","when_to_use":"When deciding on architecture patterns for a new Python project or module","quick_start":"Use the decision tree to determine if DI/SOA or lightweight patterns fit your use case"}} |
| context_limit | 700 |
| tags | ["python","architecture","dependency-injection","service-oriented","design-patterns","decision-tree"] |
| requires_tools | [] |
When to Use DI/SOA vs Simple Scripts
Use DI/SOA Pattern (Service-Oriented Architecture) For:
- Web Applications: Flask/FastAPI apps with multiple routes and services
- Background Workers: Celery tasks, async workers processing queues
- Microservices: Services with API endpoints and business logic
- Data Pipelines: ETL with multiple stages, transformations, and validations
- CLI Tools with Complexity: Multi-command CLIs with shared state and configuration
- Systems with External Dependencies: Apps requiring mock testing (databases, APIs, caches)
- Domain-Driven Design: Applications with complex business rules and aggregates
Benefits: Testability (mock dependencies), maintainability (clear separation), extensibility (swap implementations)
Skip DI/SOA (Keep It Simple) For:
- One-Off Scripts: Data migration scripts, batch processing, ad-hoc analysis
- Simple CLI Tools: Single-purpose utilities without shared state
- Jupyter Notebooks: Exploratory analysis and prototyping
- Configuration Files: Environment setup, deployment scripts
- Glue Code: Simple wrappers connecting two systems
- Proof of Concepts: Quick prototypes to validate ideas
Benefits: Less boilerplate, faster development, easier to understand
Decision Tree
Is this a long-lived service or multi-step process?
YES -> Use DI/SOA (testability, maintainability matter)
NO |
Does it need mock testing or swappable dependencies?
YES -> Use DI/SOA (dependency injection enables testing)
NO |
Is it a one-off script or simple automation?
YES -> Skip DI/SOA (keep it simple, minimize boilerplate)
NO |
Will it grow in complexity over time?
YES -> Use DI/SOA (invest in architecture upfront)
NO -> Skip DI/SOA (don't over-engineer)
Example: When NOT to Use DI/SOA
Lightweight Script Pattern:
import pandas as pd
from pathlib import Path
def process_sales_data(input_path: Path, output_path: Path) -> None:
"""Process sales CSV and generate summary report.
This is a one-off script, so we skip DI/SOA patterns.
No need for IFileReader interface or dependency injection.
"""
df = pd.read_csv(input_path)
df['total'] = df['quantity'] * df['price']
summary = df.groupby('category').agg({
'total': 'sum',
'quantity': 'sum'
}).reset_index()
summary.to_csv(output_path, index=False)
print(f"Summary saved to {output_path}")
if __name__ == "__main__":
process_sales_data(
Path("data/sales.csv"),
Path("data/summary.csv")
)
Same Task with Unnecessary DI/SOA (Over-Engineering):
from abc import ABC, abstractmethod
from dataclasses import dataclass
import pandas as pd
from pathlib import Path
class IDataReader(ABC):
@abstractmethod
def read(self, path: Path) -> pd.DataFrame: ...
class IDataWriter(ABC):
@abstractmethod
def write(self, df: pd.DataFrame, path: Path) -> None: ...
class CSVReader(IDataReader):
def read(self, path: Path) -> pd.DataFrame:
return pd.read_csv(path)
class CSVWriter(IDataWriter):
def write(self, df: pd.DataFrame, path: Path) -> None:
df.to_csv(path, index=False)
@dataclass
class SalesProcessor:
reader: IDataReader
writer: IDataWriter
def process(self, input_path: Path, output_path: Path) -> None:
df = self.reader.read(input_path)
df['total'] = df['quantity'] * df['price']
summary = df.groupby('category').agg({
'total': 'sum',
'quantity': 'sum'
}).reset_index()
self.writer.write(summary, output_path)
if __name__ == "__main__":
processor = SalesProcessor(
reader=CSVReader(),
writer=CSVWriter()
)
processor.process(
Path("data/sales.csv"),
Path("data/summary.csv")
)
Key Principle: Use DI/SOA when you need testability, maintainability, or extensibility. For simple scripts, direct calls and minimal abstraction are perfectly fine.