I have a class that define a constant in my rails app. For example:
module A
module B
class C
CONSTANT = "constant"
end
end
end
And then, in another module, I want to get this constant:
module Test
class Main
def get_constant
const = A::B::C::CONSTANT
end
end
end
This is too long and verbose. I tried some ways for not using prefix A::B::C. for example:
module Test
class Main
include A::B
def get_constant
const = C::CONSTANT
end
end
end
But in all cases, I always meet error because my rails app cannot find this constant. Please tell me how
In the second class/module, you can create a reference to the constant from the first:
class One
OneConst = 1
end
class Two
TwoConst = One::OneConst
def self.two_const
TwoConst
end
def two_const
TwoConst
end
end
puts Two.two_const
puts Two.new.two_const
Related
I'm confused about using "include" vs "extend, after searching for hours all I got is that module methods used with instance of the class including the module, and module methods used with the class itself when the class extending the module of those methods.
but this didn't help me to figure out, why this code give error when commenting the extend module line in "#extend Inventoryable"
while work when uncomment it, here's the code
module Inventoryable
def create(attributes)
object = new(attributes)
instances.push(object)
return object
end
def instances
#instances ||= []
end
def stock_count
#stock_count ||= 0
end
def stock_count=(number)
#stock_count = number
end
def in_stock?
stock_count > 0
end
end
class Shirt
#extend Inventoryable
include Inventoryable
attr_accessor :attributes
def initialize(attributes)
#attributes = attributes
end
end
shirt1 = Shirt.create(name: "MTF", size: "L")
shirt2 = Shirt.create(name: "MTF", size: "M")
puts Shirt.instances.inspect
the output is
store2.rb:52:in `<main>': undefined method `create' for Shirt:Class (NoMethodError)
while when uncomment the "extend Inventoryable" to make the code work:
module Inventoryable
def create(attributes)
object = new(attributes)
instances.push(object)
return object
end
def instances
#instances ||= []
end
def stock_count
#stock_count ||= 0
end
def stock_count=(number)
#stock_count = number
end
def in_stock?
stock_count > 0
end
end
class Shirt
extend Inventoryable
include Inventoryable
attr_accessor :attributes
def initialize(attributes)
#attributes = attributes
end
end
shirt1 = Shirt.create(name: "MTF", size: "L")
shirt2 = Shirt.create(name: "MTF", size: "M")
puts Shirt.instances.inspect
makes the code work and output the following
[#<Shirt:0x0055792cb93890 #attributes={:name=>"MTF", :size=>"L"}>, #<Shirt:0x0055792cb937a0 #attributes={:name=>"MTF", :size=>"M"}>]
it's kinda confusing, but all I need to know, is why I need to extend the module in order to avoid the error ?, and how to edit this code to make it work without the extend method ? , what's left in the code that still depends on the extend ?
When you extend a module, the methods in that module become "class methods"**. So, when you extend Inventoryable, create becomes available as a method on the Shirt class.
When you include a module, the methods in that module become "instance methods"**. So, when you include Inventoryable, create is not available on the Shirt class (but is available on an instance of Shirt).
To make create available on the Shirt class when using include, you can use the included hook. That might look something like:
module Inventoryable
module ClassMethods
def create
puts "create!"
end
end
module InstanceMethods
end
def self.included(receiver)
receiver.extend ClassMethods
receiver.include InstanceMethods
end
end
Then if you do:
class Shirt
include Invetoryable
end
You can do:
> Shirt.create
create!
=> nil
** The ruby purists in the crowd will correctly point out that, in ruby, everything is an instance method and that there are no class methods. That is formally 100% correct, but we'll use the colloquial meaning of class and instance methods here.
When you extend a module in a class, you get the module's methods exposed as class methods but if you include the module then you get the module's method as instance methods, in your example for you to be able to call create method of Inventoryable class you need to invoke it using an instance of Shirt class (if you include the module)
shirt1 = Shirt.new(attributes).create(attributes)
Without more info I can't tell what you are trying to do but you need to redesign the initialize and create methods to decide where or what to do in those methods.
I'll try to explain it using a simple example
module A
def test
puts "ok"
end
end
class B
include A
end
class C
extend A
end
puts C.test # here you invoke the method against the class itself
puts B.new.test #here you create an instance to do it
Hope it helps.
At the end of the day, it's really simple:
C.include(M) makes the current superclass of C the superclass of M and M the superclass of C. In other words, it inserts M into C's ancestry chain.
obj.extend(M) is (roughly) the same as obj.singleton_class.include(M).
In Ruby, I understand that ::ClassName for calling class at base module. For example, here is my code:
module HHT
module V1
module OfflineCheckIn
class PutOfflineCheckInProductsApi < ApplicationApi
put 'offline' do
ActiveRecord::Base.transaction do
OfflineCheckIn.create(check_in_param) # exception here
end
end
end
end
end
end
When I run, I meet exception:
NoMethodError (undefined method `create' for
HHT::V1::OfflineCheckIn:Module)
As I understand, Rails understand that OfflineCheckIn currently inside module HHT::V1::OfflineCheckIn, so I must call at base class ::OfflineCheckIn. Thing that I don't understand is: at another controller, some previous programmer implements same way with me, but he doesn't need to call :: before model.
So my question is: when we don't need to use :: before class and rails can understand that is base class ?
Thanks
You have to call class as ::ClassName if in your hierarchy there's a class/module with the same name, to differentiate between them, for example:
class Foo; end
module Bar
class Foo; end # this is another Foo
def self.a
puts ::Foo == Foo
end
end
module FooBar
def self.a
puts ::Foo == Foo
end
end
Bar.a # => false
FooBar.a # => true
Here we have ::Foo and ::Bar::Foo, but shorthand Foo points to one of them depending on context.
Also it does not matter if the entities are classes or modules, both are just assigned as a value for a constant:
module Foo; end
module Bar
Foo = "a string"
def self.baz
puts Foo.class
end
end
puts Foo.class # => Module
Bar.baz # => String
I am trying to DRY my code by implementing modules. However, I have constants stored in models (not the module) that I am trying to access with self.class.
Here are (I hope) the relevant snippets:
module Conversion
def constant(name_str)
self.class.const_get(name_str.upcase)
end
end
module DarkElixir
def dark_elixir(th_level)
structure.map { |name_str| structure_dark_elixir(name_str, th_level) if constant(name_str)[0][:dark_elixir_cost] }.compact.reduce(:+)
end
end
class Army < ActiveRecord::Base
include Conversion, DarkElixir
TH_LEVEL = [...]
end
def structure_dark_elixir(name_str, th_level)
name_sym = name_str.to_sym
Array(0..send(name_sym)).map { |level| constant(name_str)[level][:dark_elixir_cost] }.reduce(:+) * TH_LEVEL[th_level][sym_qty(name)]
end
When I place the structure_dark_elixir method inside the DarkElixir module, I get an error, "uninitialized constant DarkElixir::TH_LEVEL"
While if I place it inside the Army class, it finds the appropriate constant.
I believe it is because I am not scoping the self.constant_get correctly. I would like to keep the method in question in the module as other models need to run the method referencing their own TH_LEVEL constants.
How might I accomplish this?
Why not just use class methods?
module DarkElixir
def dark_elixir(th_level)
# simplified example
th_level * self.class.my_th_level
end
end
class Army < ActiveRecord::Base
include DarkElixir
def self.my_th_level
5
end
end
Ugh. Method in question uses two constants. It was the second constant that was tripping up, not the first. Added "self.class::" prior to the second constant--back in business.
def structure_dark_elixir(name_str, th_lvl)
name_sym = name_str.to_sym
Array(0..send(name_sym)).map { |level| constant(name_str)[level][:dark_elixir_cost] }.reduce(:+) * self.class::TH_LEVEL[th_lvl][sym_qty(name_str)]
end
I have a class like so:
Railsapp/lib/five9_providers/record_provider.rb:
class Five9Providers::RecordProvider < Five9Providers::BaseProvider
def add_record_to_list
variable = 'test'
end
end
Then, in a controller I have this:
Railsapp/app/controllers/five9_controller.rb:
class Five9Controller < ApplicationController
def import
record_provider = Five9Providers::RecordProvider.new()
record_provider.add_record_to_list
puts Five9Providers::RecordProvider::variable
end
end
However, calling my controller method import just returns:
NoMethodError (undefined method 'variable' for Five9Providers::RecordProvider:Class)
How can I access variable from the recover_provider.rb class in my five9_controller.rb class?
EDIT:
Even when using ##variable in both my record_provider and my five9_controller, I still can't access that variable. I am calling it like so: puts ##variable.
As written, you cannot. variable is local to the instance method and can't be accessed by any Ruby expression from outside the method.
On a related point, the term "class variable" is typically used to refer to variables of the form ##variable.
Update: In response to your "Edit" statement, if you change variable to ##variable in your class, then there are techniques available to access that variable from outside the class, but a naked reference to ##variable isn't one of them. Carefully read the answers to the question you cited in your comment for more information.
Best way is to set and get the value using methods. Below is a sample code
class Planet
##planets_count = 0
def initialize(name)
#name = name
##planets_count += 1
end
def self.planets_count
##planets_count
end
def self.add_planet
##planets_count += 1
end
def add_planet_from_obj
##planets_count += 1
end
end
Planet.new("uranus")
Plant.add_planet
obj = Planet.new("earth")
obj.add_planet_from_obj
How do you define a method for an attribute of an instance in Ruby?
Let's say we've got a class called HtmlSnippet, which extends ActiveRecord::Base of Rails and has got an attribute content. And, I want to define a method replace_url_to_anchor_tag! for it and get it called in the following way;
html_snippet = HtmlSnippet.find(1)
html_snippet.content = "Link to http://stackoverflow.com"
html_snippet.content.replace_url_to_anchor_tag!
# => "Link to <a href='http://stackoverflow.com'>http://stackoverflow.com</a>"
# app/models/html_snippet.rb
class HtmlSnippet < ActiveRecord::Base
# I expected this bit to do what I want but not
class << #content
def replace_url_to_anchor_tag!
matching = self.match(/(https?:\/\/[\S]+)/)
"<a href='#{matching[0]}'/>#{matching[0]}</a>"
end
end
end
As content is an instance of String class, redefine String class is one option. But I don't feel like to going for it because it overwrites behaviour of all instances of String;
class HtmlSnippet < ActiveRecord::Base
class String
def replace_url_to_anchor_tag!
...
end
end
end
Any suggestions please?
The reason why your code is not working is simple - you are working with #content which is nil in the context of execution (the self is the class, not the instance). So you are basically modifying eigenclass of nil.
So you need to extend the instance of #content when it's set. There are few ways, there is one:
class HtmlSnippet < ActiveRecord::Base
# getter is overrided to extend behaviour of freshly loaded values
def content
value = read_attribute(:content)
decorate_it(value) unless value.respond_to?(:replace_url_to_anchor_tag)
value
end
def content=(value)
dup_value = value.dup
decorate_it(dup_value)
write_attribute(:content, dup_value)
end
private
def decorate_it(value)
class << value
def replace_url_to_anchor_tag
# ...
end
end
end
end
For the sake of simplicity I've ommited the "nil scenario" - you should handle nil values differently. But that's quite simple.
Another thing is that you might ask is why I use dup in the setter. If there is no dup in the code, the behaviour of the following code might be wrong (obviously it depends on your requirements):
x = "something"
s = HtmlSnippet.find(1)
s.content = x
s.content.replace_url_to_anchor_tag # that's ok
x.content.replace_url_to_anchor_tag # that's not ok
Wihtout dup you are extending not only x.content but also original string that you've assigned.