what is right way of writing module? is it only used to stock some peace of code to minimize the number of lines, or is it something much more important than that
I have used and seen ways of writing module, I am working on setting up correct way to define and standardised module. this example is kind of controller code that we use in rails
Way 1 :-
module B
extend ActiveSupport::Concern
def process_items
# do somthing...
#items.pluck(:names)
end
end
Class A
include B
def index
#items = Item.all
#item_names = process_items
end
end
Way 2 :-
module B
extend ActiveSupport::Concern
def process_items(items)
# do somthing...
items.pluck(:names)
end
end
Class A
include B
def index
#items = Item.all
#item_names = process_items(#items)
end
end
Way 1 :-
When I see this independently, its not much readable as I don't know how #items appeared in this method
Unit testing would be hard for method as its dependent
Way 2 :-
Looking at method I can see input is coming we are processing it and returning it back (readablity is good)
Unit testing is easy to this, we wll call method pass what it needs and expect
The way I see modules should be independent, self explanatory, it should be generic so that can be used in any class, kind of helpers. But other way could be dependent on where we use modules
We are using modules like in rails
We use conccern in models, when we call module method we can use self.<field> we don't need to pass anything because instance variable is supposed to be accesssable in every instance method
View helpers are modules I see they put logic into it hard to understand how the variable come from may be instance variable or params, what about making it method which accept somthing and return it back
Concerns on controllers, like the example I have given
I would like to have thoughts on this, what is best approach out of it? is it something which can be standarise or it is more situational or I don't know yet :)
Note: -
I was looking at this question but answer given on this question is no more valid as referenced links are not working.
Right Way to Use Module
The difference here is practically academic, as if you have attr_reader :x then both #x and x will have the same meaning.
It's understood that within a mixin module you will be referencing methods and/or variables that are part of the class or module doing the "mixing in". As such, seeing #x, or in your case, #items, should not come as a real surprise.
If you want to add it as an explicit argument you're sort of missing a lot of the benefits of using a mixin in the first place. You don't need to mix it in at all, you can just use it like B.process_items(...). In other words, your second approach is having an identity crisis. Is it a stand-alone module that includes Concern for no reason, or a weak mixin?
When it comes to testing, you must test the mixin in a module or class which implements the required features. In this case you need either an #items variable, or an items method, and that must have a value of the expected type.
This should be documented somewhere for clarity, but is effectively an implicit contract with anyone using this module.
Related
I have a controller object with controller.class == Admin::TeamsController. I might also have a circumstance like controller.class == Admin::UsersController. Now I want to check if this is true:
controller.class.to_s.match?('Admin::')
I.e., I want to know: Is this object of a class that's defined within the Admin module namespace? To spell that out, is the structure like the following?
module Admin
module SomeOtherModulePerhaps
class TeamsController
end
end
end
My question: Is there a nicer Ruby way to test for this? It feels kind of hacky to convert the class to a string, then do a regex match like that.
EDIT:
For my constrained use case, I could check like this:
controller.class.to_s.split('::').first == 'Admin'
But that doesn't quite solve the general case that other people might have. For example, there might be cases like XyzAdmin::TeamsController that one might want to exclude, on which my first solution fails, or Foo::Admin::TeamsController that one might want to include, on which my second solution fails.
I'd like to find a better way.
Rails comes with module_parents:
module Admin
module SomeOtherModulePerhaps
class TeamsController
end
end
end
controller = Admin::SomeOtherModulePerhaps::TeamsController.new
controller.class.module_parents
#=> [Admin::SomeOtherModulePerhaps, Admin, Object]
controller.class.module_parents.include?(Admin)
#=> true
Under the hood, it uses Module#name, i.e. "Admin::SomeOtherModulePerhaps::TeamsController".
How about
controller.class.const_defined?(:Admin)
returns true or false
What about to use controller_path
https://api.rubyonrails.org/classes/AbstractController/Base.html#method-c-controller_path
controller_path.match?('admin')
You might try playing with Module#nesting, but it’d return rather unexpected results depending on whether the class was defined using fully qualified name or a set of nesting statements.
After all, class names in ruby are simple constants, and one might define the class name in many ways, like:
module A
def self.class!
Class.new do |c|
define_method :test do puts c.name end
end
end
end
A.const_set :C, A.class!
#⇒ A::C
A::C.new.test
#⇒ A::C
Which roughly means, there are tons of ways to fool the best detection mechanism. That said, I’d go with the easiest one.
controller.class.to_s.split('::')[0...-1].include?('Admin')
Any occurrence of Admin would be counted, save for when Admin is the last item in the class name chain.
I want to know: Is this object of a class that's defined within the Admin module namespace?
[...]
Is there a nicer Ruby way to test for this?
Classes aren't defined in modules, therefore, there is neither a nice way nor any other way to test for it.
When you write a class definition body inside a module definition body, you do not create any relationship whatsoever between the module and the class. The only relationship is between the constant that the class gets assigned to and the module, not the class.
Therefore, since this relationship does not exist, you cannot test for it.
I wish to make a custom method (e.g. def plus_two(x) x + 2 end and have it be accessible everywhere within the app - that is, accessible in the controller, model, console, views, tests, and any other .rb files. I currently have the same method defined in many areas of the app, and wish to make it DRY
How can this be achieved?
Note: I don't mind if calling the method requires prepending something (I have seen some answers where methods are prepended with :: or with a namespace, but otherwise have a preference to keep code succinct where possible
I have done some reading at similar questions (e.g. this one) but I can't quite get it
Reading the comments it seems like you are just looking for a clear and simple example of a method that is available everywhere in your application:
# in app/models/calculator.rb
module Calculator
def self.plus_two(x)
x + 2
end
end
Which can be called like this:
Calculator.plus_two(8)
#=> 10
I have a monkeypatched of ActiveRecord find with some business logic, for example:
# lib/core_extensions/active_record/finder_methods/finder.rb
module ActiveRecord
module FinderMethods
def find(*args)
return super if block_given?
#... business logic code => my_error_control = true
raise "My Error" if my_error_control
retorn = find_with_ids(*args)
end
end
end
retorn
I have not seen many examples like this, and this causes me a doubt:
Where should finder.rb be?
In this example, this file is in lib/core_extensions/... but if it contains business logic, I think finder.rb should lives in the folder app/core_extensions/ isn't it?
Edited, after Sergio Answer
things like this, are a bad practice?
# lib/core_extensions/nil_class/image_attributes.rb
# suport for product images attributes
class NilClass
def main_image(size,evita_video)
"/images/paperclip_missing/original/missing.png"
end
end
Where should finder.rb be?
Ultimately, it doesn't matter. It only matters that this code gets loaded. This mix of patching base libraries and adding business logic there looks like something that MUST be documented thoroughly (in the project's wiki or something like that). And if it is documented, then it doesn't matter. The code is where the documentation says it is.
That being out of the way, here's a design suggestion:
when user seeks a Family Family.find(params[family_id],session[:company_id]), this find will compare the company of the family result family.company witht the parameter
Why not do something like this:
family = current_company.families.find(params[:family_id])
where current_company can be defined as #current_company ||= Company.find(session[:company_id])
Here, if this company doesn't have this family, you'll get an exception.
Same effect*, only without any patching. Much more futureproof. You can even add a couple of rubocop rules to ensure that you never write a naked Family.find.
* it's not like you add that patch and rest of your code magically acquires super-powers. No. You still have to change all the finders, to pass that company id.
It's the first time I see such case :). I'd put it in app/core_extensions and check if live reloading works correctly with it. If not, I'd move it to lib/. (It's just a heuristic)
Edit:
Instead of extending NilClass I'd rather use regular NullObjects. It's really less surprising and easier to understand.
https://robots.thoughtbot.com/rails-refactoring-example-introduce-null-object
I'm working with a massive legacy code base, so I am looking for advice concerning this particular issue, please, not suggestions of better high-level implementations.
A simplified version of what I'm working with:
class Order < ActiveRecord::Base
has_many :line_items
#other stuff
def balance
#some definition
end
end
class LineItem < ActiveRecord::Base
belongs_to :order
#other stuff
end
module Concerns
module LineItems
module Aggregates
extend ActiveSupport::Concern
#stuff
def balance
#some other definition
end
end
end
end
Order has a method called 'balance,' and a module of LineItem also has a method called 'balance.' It seems that most of the time (in most places in the code base), when specific_line_item.balance is called, it used the method definition under the LineItem module, but there are a couple of places where it instead calls the method from Order.
Is there any way in Ruby/Rails to specify on method call which of these two I'd like to use? OR is there probably something else going on here because Ruby doesn't have method overloading, so the problem I'm describing here isn't possible?
All relevant cases where either method is called are coming from a line_item (i.e. specific_line_item.balance), so I would think it would always choose the method closer to home, rather than making the associative jump and calling Order's 'balance' method without being told to.
EDIT:
Thanks for the responses! It seems I wasn't clear enough with my question. I understand the difference between
Order.first.balance
and
LineItem.first.balance
and that the balance method being called is the one defined within the class for that object. In the situation I'm describing, I observed, in the actual live app environment, that at a place in the code where
LineItem.find(some_id).balance
was called it output not the result that would be computed by the LineItem 'balance' method, but the one from the Order class.
So I had hoped to learn that there's some ruby quirk that might have an object call an associate's method of the same name under some conditions, rather than it's own. But I'm thinking that's not possible, so there's probably something else going on under the covers specific to this situation.
Firstly, ActiveRecord::Concern can change a lot of behaviour and you've left out a lot of code, most crucially, I don't know where it's being injected, but I can make an educated guess.
For a Concern's methods to be available a given object, it must be include'd in the object's class's body.
If you have access to an instance of the Order object, at any point you can call the balance method:
order = Orders.last # grab the last order in your database
order.balance # this will call Order#balance
And if you have the Order then you can also get the LineItem:
order.line_items.first.balance # should call the Concerns:: LineItems::Aggregates#balance
You can open up a Rails console (with rails console) and run the above code to see if it works as you expect. You'll need a working database to get meaningful orders and balances, and you might need to poke around to find a completed order, but Ruby is all about exploration and a REPL is the place to go.
I'd also grep (or ag or ack) the codebase looking for calls to balance maybe doing something like grep -r "(^|\s)\w+\.balance" *, what you want to look for is the word before .balance, that is the receiver of the "balance" message, if that receiver is an Order object then it will call Order#balance and if it is a LineItem object then it will call Concerns:: LineItems::Aggregates#balance instead.
I get the feeling you're not familiar with Ruby's paradigm, and if that's the case then an example might help.
Let's define two simple Ruby objects:
class Doorman
def greet
puts "Good day to you sir!"
end
end
class Bartender
def greet
puts "What are you drinking?"
end
end
Doorman and Bartender both have a greet method, and which is called depends on the object we call greet on.
# Here we instantiate one of each
a_doorman = Doorman.new
a_bartender = Bartender.new
a_doorman.greet # outputs "Good day to you sir!"
a_bartender.greet # outputs "What are you drinking?"
We're still using a method called greet but the receiver is what determines which is called.
Ruby is a "message passing language" and each "method" is not a function but it's a message that is passed to an object and handled by that object.
References
How to use concerns in Rails 4
http://api.rubyonrails.org/classes/ActiveSupport/Concern.html
http://guides.rubyonrails.org/command_line.html#rails-console
In ruby, I'm starting to see a pretty normal practice including modules and mixins referenced as ::ModuleName::ClassName, where in the past it was pretty much just ModuleName::ClassName.
What I'd like to get here is a decent understanding of why this practice is being seen more lately and what it does differently.
What's the difference?
What's the benefit (if the prior doesn't answer this)?
Thanks in advance for your input.
If you put the :: in the beginning you are referring to the global namespace, if you don't you are referring to your current namespace.
Usually if you don't have a class/module with the same name inside your class/module you would not need to use the :: in the beginning.
class Customer
def to_s
"Customer global"
end
end
class Order
class Customer
def to_s
"Customer within order"
end
end
def initialize
puts Customer.new
puts ::Customer.new
end
end
Order.new
will print out
Customer within order
Customer global
When you do ::ModuleName::ClassName you're saying:
I want you to look for ::ModuleName::ClassName at the root namespace, ignoring if this code is found inside another module. So, it will always look for a class that's named as ::ModuleName::ClassName and nothing else
When you say it like this ModuleName::ClassName, you're saying:
I want you to look for ModuleName::ClassName but looking at the current scope first and then at the other scopes. So, if you have a module called MyModule and this my module references ModuleName::ClassName then first try to find MyModule::ModuleName::ClassName then try to resolve ::ModuleName::ClassName.
When I'm defining code like this I almost always use ::ModuleName::ClassName to avoid any naming conflicts.