The DYNAMIC FACTORY pattern describes how to create a factory that allows the creation of unanticipated products derived from the same abstraction by storing the information about their concrete type in external metadata
from : http://www.wirfs-brock.com/PDFs/TheDynamicFactoryPattern.pdf
Yes...
Look at the Factories classes in the Qtilities Qt library.
@TonyD regarding
We can change the behavior of an application by just changing its configuration information.
It is 100% possible if you interpret the sentence in another way. What I read and understand is you change a configuration file (xml in the doc) that gets loaded to change the behaviour of the application. So perhaps your application has 2 loggers, one to file and one to a GUI. So the config file can be edited to choose one or both to be used. Thus no change of the application but the behaviour is changed. The requirement is that anything that you can configure in the file is available in the code, so to say log using network will not work since it is not implemented.
New product types should be easily added without requiring neither a new factory class nor modifying any existing one.
Yes that sounds a bit impossible. I will accept the ability to add ones without having to change the original application. Thus one should be able to add using plugins or another method and leave the application/factory/existing classes in tact and unchanged.
All of the above is supported by the example provided. Although Qtilities is a Qt library, the factories are not Qt specific.