How to do real readonly properties (accessors => attributs) - ruby

Considering this simple code :
class Yeah
attr_reader :foo
attr_reader :fool
attr_reader :feel
def initialize(foo: "test", fool: {}, feel: [])
#foo = foo
#fool = fool
end
end
test = Yeah::new
pp test
test.fool[:one] = 10
pp test
Output :
#<Yeah:0x000008019a84a0 #foo="test", #fool={}>
#<Yeah:0x000008019a84a0 #foo="test", #fool={:one=>10}>
My Question is, there is a "simple","clean" way, to do read accesors to real readonly Array,Hash attributs or I need to inherit Array or Hash with a lot of locking hard to write, (undef,alias) or using Proxy, delegate or others patterns like this ?

You can think of something like below :
class Yeah
def self.reader_meth
%i(foo fool feel).each do |m|
define_method(m){instance_variable_get("##{m}").dup.freeze}
end
end
def initialize(foo: "test", fool: {}, feel: [])
#foo = foo
#fool = fool
#feel =feel
end
reader_meth
end
test = Yeah.new
test # => #<Yeah:0x8975498 #foo="test", #fool={}, #feel=[]>
test.fool[:one] = 10 # can't modify frozen Hash (RuntimeError)
test # => #<Yeah:0x8975498 #foo="test", #fool={}, #feel=[]>

Because i want to generalize this solution and to prevent "evil" evals :
i finally, from the Arup solution arrived to this :
class Module
def attr_readonly *syms
syms.each do |method|
define_method(method){
return self.instance_variable_get("##{method.to_s}").dup.freeze
}
end
end
end
class Yeah
attr_reader :foo
attr_readonly :fool
attr_reader :feel
def initialize(foo: "test", fool: {}, feel: [])
#foo = foo
#fool = fool
#feel = feel
end
end

What about Object#freeze:
class Yeah
def fool
#fool.freeze
end
def initialize(fool={})
#fool = fool
end
end

Related

Creating Ruby builder object with re-usable code

I'm working to create a few Ruby builder objects, and thinking on how I could reuse some of Ruby's magic to reduce the logic of the builder to a single class/module. It's been ~10 years since my last dance with the language, so a bit rusty.
For example, I have this builder:
class Person
PROPERTIES = [:name, :age]
attr_accessor(*PROPERTIES)
def initialize(**kwargs)
kwargs.each do |k, v|
self.send("#{k}=", v) if self.respond_to?(k)
end
end
def build
output = {}
PROPERTIES.each do |prop|
if self.respond_to?(prop) and !self.send(prop).nil?
value = self.send(prop)
# if value itself is a builder, evalute it
output[prop] = value.respond_to?(:build) ? value.build : value
end
end
output
end
def method_missing(m, *args, &block)
if m.to_s.start_with?("set_")
mm = m.to_s.gsub("set_", "")
if PROPERTIES.include?(mm.to_sym)
self.send("#{mm}=", *args)
return self
end
end
end
end
Which can be used like so:
Person.new(name: "Joe").set_age(30).build
# => {name: "Joe", age: 30}
I would like to be able to refactor everything to a class and/or module so that I could create multiple such builders that'll only need to define attributes and inherit or include the rest (and possibly extend each other).
class BuilderBase
# define all/most relevant methods here for initialization,
# builder attributes and object construction
end
module BuilderHelper
# possibly throw some of the methods here for better scope access
end
class Person < BuilderBase
include BuilderHelper
PROPERTIES = [:name, :age, :email, :address]
attr_accessor(*PROPERTIES)
end
# Person.new(name: "Joe").set_age(30).set_email("joe#mail.com").set_address("NYC").build
class Server < BuilderBase
include BuilderHelper
PROPERTIES = [:cpu, :memory, :disk_space]
attr_accessor(*PROPERTIES)
end
# Server.new.set_cpu("i9").set_memory("32GB").set_disk_space("1TB").build
I've been able to get this far:
class BuilderBase
def initialize(**kwargs)
kwargs.each do |k, v|
self.send("#{k}=", v) if self.respond_to?(k)
end
end
end
class Person < BuilderBase
PROPERTIES = [:name, :age]
attr_accessor(*PROPERTIES)
def build
...
end
def method_missing(m, *args, &block)
...
end
end
Trying to extract method_missing and build into the base class or a module keeps throwing an error at me saying something like:
NameError: uninitialized constant BuilderHelper::PROPERTIES
OR
NameError: uninitialized constant BuilderBase::PROPERTIES
Essentially the neither the parent class nor the mixin are able to access the child class' attributes. For the parent this makes sense, but not sure why the mixin can't read the values inside the class it was included into. This being Ruby I'm sure there's some magical way to do this that I have missed.
Help appreciated - thanks!
I reduced your sample to the required parts and came up with:
module Mixin
def say_mixin
puts "Mixin: Value defined in #{self.class::VALUE}"
end
end
class Parent
def say_parent
puts "Parent: Value defined in #{self.class::VALUE}"
end
end
class Child < Parent
include Mixin
VALUE = "CHILD"
end
child = Child.new
child.say_mixin
child.say_parent
This is how you could access a CONSTANT that lives in the child/including class from the parent/included class.
But I don't see why you want to have this whole Builder thing in the first place. Would an OpenStruct not work for your case?
Interesting question. As mentioned by #Pascal, an OpenStruct might already do what you're looking for.
Still, it might be more concise to explicitly define the setter methods. It might also be clearer to replace the PROPERTIES constants by methods calls. And since I'd expect a build method to return a complete object and not just a Hash, I renamed it to to_h:
class BuilderBase
def self.properties(*ps)
ps.each do |property|
attr_reader property
define_method :"set_#{property}" do |value|
instance_variable_set(:"##{property}", value)
#hash[property] = value
self
end
end
end
def initialize(**kwargs)
#hash = {}
kwargs.each do |k, v|
self.send("set_#{k}", v) if self.respond_to?(k)
end
end
def to_h
#hash
end
end
class Person < BuilderBase
properties :name, :age, :email, :address
end
p Person.new(name: "Joe").set_age(30).set_email("joe#mail.com").set_address("NYC").to_h
# {:name=>"Joe", :age=>30, :email=>"joe#mail.com", :address=>"NYC"}
class Server < BuilderBase
properties :cpu, :memory, :disk_space
end
p Server.new.set_cpu("i9").set_memory("32GB").set_disk_space("1TB").to_h
# {:cpu=>"i9", :memory=>"32GB", :disk_space=>"1TB"}
I think no need to declare PROPERTIES, we can create a general builder like this:
class Builder
attr_reader :build
def initialize(clazz)
#build = clazz.new
end
def self.build(clazz, &block)
builder = Builder.new(clazz)
builder.instance_eval(&block)
builder.build
end
def set(attr, val)
#build.send("#{attr}=", val)
self
end
def method_missing(m, *args, &block)
if #build.respond_to?("#{m}=")
set(m, *args)
else
#build.send("#{m}", *args, &block)
end
self
end
def respond_to_missing?(method_name, include_private = false)
#build.respond_to?(method_name) || super
end
end
Using
class Test
attr_accessor :x, :y, :z
attr_reader :w, :u, :v
def set_w(val)
#w = val&.even? ? val : 0
end
def add_u(val)
#u = val if val&.odd?
end
end
test1 = Builder.build(Test) {
x 1
y 2
z 3
} # <Test:0x000055b6b0fb2888 #x=1, #y=2, #z=3>
test2 = Builder.new(Test).set(:x, 1988).set_w(6).add_u(2).build
# <Test:0x000055b6b0fb23b0 #x=1988, #w=6>

How to get all instances variables in ruby class?

I have a ruby class, and in one of the methods, it calls an external function, and pass in all instance variables, and continue with the return value. Here is the code:
class MyClass
attr_accessor :name1
attr_accessor :name2
...
attr_accessor :namen
def inner_func():
all_vars = ???? # how to collect all my instance variables into a dict/Hash?
res = out_func(all_vars)
do_more_stuff(res)
end
end
The problem is the instance variables might vary in subclasses. I can't refer them as their names. So, is there a way to do this? Or Am I thinking in a wrong way?
You can use instance_variables to collect them in an Array. You will get all initialized instance variables.
class MyClass
attr_accessor :name1
attr_accessor :name2
...
attr_accessor :namen
def inner_func():
all_vars = instance_variables
res = out_func(all_vars)
do_more_stuff(res)
end
end
You could keep track of all accessors as you create them:
class Receiver
def work(arguments)
puts "Working with #{arguments.inspect}"
end
end
class MyClass
def self.attr_accessor(*arguments)
super
#__attribute_names__ ||= []
#__attribute_names__ += arguments
end
def self.attribute_names
#__attribute_names__
end
def self.inherited(base)
parent = self
base.class_eval do
#__attribute_names__ = parent.attribute_names
end
end
def attributes
self.class.attribute_names.each_with_object({}) do |attribute_name, result|
result[attribute_name] = public_send(attribute_name)
end
end
def work
Receiver.new.work(attributes)
end
attr_accessor :foo
attr_accessor :bar
end
class MySubclass < MyClass
attr_accessor :baz
end
Usage
my_class = MyClass.new
my_class.foo = 123
my_class.bar = 234
my_class.work
# Working with {:foo=>123, :bar=>234}
my_subclass = MySubclass.new
my_subclass.foo = 123
my_subclass.bar = 234
my_subclass.baz = 345
my_subclass.work
# Working with {:foo=>123, :bar=>234, :baz=>345}

Turning constructor arguments into instance variables [duplicate]

This question already has answers here:
Closed 11 years ago.
Possible Duplicate:
Idiomatic object creation in ruby
There are many occaisions when I have an initialize method that looks like this:
class Foo
def initialize bar, buz, ...
#bar, #buz, ... = bar, buz, ...
end
end
Is there a way to do this with a simple command like:
class Foo
attr_constructor :bar, :buz, ...
end
where the symbols represent the name of the instance variables (with the spirit/flavor of attr_accessor, attr_reader, attr_writer)?
I was wondering if there is a built in way or a more elegant way of doing something like this:
class Class
def attr_constructor *vars
define_method("initialize") do |*vals|
vars.zip(vals){|var, val| instance_variable_set("##{var}", val)}
end
end
end
so that I can use it like this:
class Foo
attr_constructor :foo, :bar, :buz
end
p Foo.new('a', 'b', 'c') # => #<Foo:0x93f3e4c #foo="a", #bar="b", #buz="c">
p Foo.new('a', 'b', 'c', 'd') # => #<Foo:0x93f3e4d #foo="a", #bar="b", #buz="c">
p Foo.new('a', 'b') # => #<Foo:0x93f3e4e #foo="a", #bar="b", #buz=nil>
I'd use OpenStruct:
require 'ostruct'
class Foo < OpenStruct
end
f = Foo.new(:bar => "baz")
f.bar
#=> "baz"
Edit: Ah OK, sorry misunderstood you. How about just:
class Foo
def initialize(*args)
#baz, #buz = args
end
end
Would this work for you?
class Foo
def initialize(hash)
hash.each { |k,v| instance_variable_set("##{k}", v) }
end
end
Interesting question. A little meta-programming should take care of it.
module Attrs
def self.included(base)
base.extend ClassMethods
base.class_eval do
class << self
attr_accessor :attrs
end
end
end
module ClassMethods
# Define the attributes that each instance of the class should have
def has_attrs(*attrs)
self.attrs = attrs
attr_accessor *attrs
end
end
def initialize(*args)
raise ArgumentError, "You passed too many arguments!" if args.size > self.class.attrs.size
# Loop through each arg, assigning it to the appropriate attribute (based on the order)
args.each_with_index do |val, i|
attr = self.class.attrs[i]
instance_variable_set "##{attr}", val
end
end
end
class Foo
include Attrs
has_attrs :bar, :buz
end
f = Foo.new('One', 'Two')
puts f.bar
puts f.buz
Of course the downside to this is inflexibility - you have to pass your constructor arguments in a specific order. Of course that's how most programming languages are. Rails people might argue you should instead do
f = Foo.new(:bar => 'One', :baz => 'Two')
which would allow you to pass in attrs in any order, as well as strip away most of the meta-programming. But that is a lot more to type.

Just for fun - add methods to an object via a block

Just for fun, again, but is it possible to take a block that contains method definitions and add those to an object, somehow? The following doesn't work (I never expected it to), but just so you get the idea of what I'm playing around with.
I do know that I can reopen a class with class << existing_object and add methods that way, but is there a way for code to pass that information in a block?
I guess I'm trying to borrow a little Java thinking here.
def new(cls)
obj = cls.new
class << obj
yield
end
obj
end
class Cat
def meow
puts "Meow"
end
end
cat = new(Cat) {
def purr
puts "Prrrr..."
end
}
cat.meow
# => Meow
# Not working
cat.purr
# => Prrrr...
EDIT | Here's the working version of the above, based on edgerunner's answer:
def new(cls, &block)
obj = cls.new
obj.instance_eval(&block)
obj
end
class Cat
def meow
puts "Meow"
end
end
cat = new(Cat) {
def purr
puts "Prrrr..."
end
}
cat.meow
# => Meow
cat.purr
# => Prrrr...
You can use class_eval(also aliased as module_eval) or instance_eval to evaluate a block in the context of a class/module or an object instance respectively.
class Cat
def meow
puts "Meow"
end
end
Cat.module_eval do
def purr
puts "Purr"
end
end
kitty = Cat.new
kitty.meow #=> Meow
kitty.purr #=> Purr
kitty.instance_eval do
def purr
puts "Purrrrrrrrrr!"
end
end
kitty.purr #=> Purrrrrrrrrr!
Yes
I suspect you thought of this and were looking for some other way, but just in case...
class A
def initialize
yield self
end
end
o = A.new do |o|
class << o
def purr
puts 'purr...'
end
end
end
o.purr
=> purr...
For the record, this isn't the usual way to dynamically add a method. Typically, a dynamic method starts life as a block itself, see, for example, *Module#define_method*.

Customising attr_reader to do lazy instantiation of attributes

(Big edit, I got part of the way there…)
I've been hacking away and I've come up with this as a way to specify things that need to be done before attributes are read:
class Class
def attr_reader(*params)
if block_given?
params.each do |sym|
define_method(sym) do
yield
self.instance_variable_get("##{sym}")
end
end
else
params.each do |sym|
attr sym
end
end
end
end
class Test
attr_reader :normal
attr_reader(:jp,:nope) { changethings if #nope.nil? }
def initialize
#normal = "Normal"
#jp = "JP"
#done = false
end
def changethings
p "doing"
#jp = "Haha!"
#nope = "poop"
end
end
j = Test.new
p j.normal
p j.jp
But changethings isn't being recognised as a method — anyone got any ideas?
You need to evaluate the block in the context of the instance. yield by default will evaluate it in its native context.
class Class
def attr_reader(*params, &blk)
if block_given?
params.each do |sym|
define_method(sym) do
self.instance_eval(&blk)
self.instance_variable_get("##{sym}")
end
end
else
params.each do |sym|
attr sym
end
end
end
end
Here's another alternative approach you can look at. It's not as elegant as what you're trying to do using define_method but it's maybe worth looking at.
Add a new method lazy_attr_reader to Class
class Class
def lazy_attr_reader(*vars)
options = vars.last.is_a?(::Hash) ? vars.pop : {}
# get the name of the method that will populate the attribute from options
# default to 'get_things'
init_method = options[:via] || 'get_things'
vars.each do |var|
class_eval("def #{var}; #{init_method} if !defined? ##{var}; ##{var}; end")
end
end
end
Then use it like this:
class Test
lazy_attr_reader :name, :via => "name_loader"
def name_loader
#name = "Bob"
end
end
In action:
irb(main):145:0> t = Test.new
=> #<Test:0x2d6291c>
irb(main):146:0> t.name
=> "Bob"
IMHO changing the context of the block is pretty counter-intuitive, from a perspective of someone who would use such attr_reader on steroids.
Perhaps you should consider plain ol' "specify method name using optional arguments" approach:
def lazy_attr_reader(*args, params)
args.each do |e|
define_method(e) do
send(params[:init]) if params[:init] && !instance_variable_get("##{e}")
instance_variable_get("##{e}")
end
end
end
class Foo
lazy_attr_reader :foo, :bar, :init => :load
def load
#foo = 'foo'
#bar = 'bar'
end
end
f = Foo.new
puts f.bar
#=> bar

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