myrrha 1.0.0
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- data/CHANGELOG.md +5 -0
- data/Gemfile +2 -0
- data/Gemfile.lock +41 -0
- data/LICENCE.md +22 -0
- data/Manifest.txt +13 -0
- data/README.md +337 -0
- data/Rakefile +23 -0
- data/examples/String#toXXX.rb +40 -0
- data/examples/coerce.rb +26 -0
- data/examples/coerce_foo.rb +12 -0
- data/examples/coerce_foo2.rb +17 -0
- data/examples/coerce_foo3.rb +23 -0
- data/examples/coerce_intro.rb +10 -0
- data/examples/coerce_noext.rb +6 -0
- data/examples/examples_helper.rb +17 -0
- data/examples/friendly_but_safe_api.rb +73 -0
- data/examples/to_ruby_literal.rb +16 -0
- data/examples/to_ruby_literal_foo.rb +14 -0
- data/examples/to_ruby_literal_foo2.rb +17 -0
- data/examples/to_ruby_literal_foo3.rb +21 -0
- data/examples/to_ruby_literal_noext.rb +5 -0
- data/lib/myrrha/coerce.rb +93 -0
- data/lib/myrrha/loader.rb +0 -0
- data/lib/myrrha/to_ruby_literal.rb +76 -0
- data/lib/myrrha/version.rb +14 -0
- data/lib/myrrha/with_core_ext.rb +2 -0
- data/lib/myrrha.rb +295 -0
- data/myrrha.gemspec +191 -0
- data/myrrha.noespec +37 -0
- data/spec/coercions/test_append.rb +11 -0
- data/spec/coercions/test_belongs_to.rb +29 -0
- data/spec/coercions/test_convert.rb +23 -0
- data/spec/coercions/test_dup.rb +21 -0
- data/spec/coercions/test_subdomain.rb +11 -0
- data/spec/shared/a_value.rb +33 -0
- data/spec/spec_helper.rb +34 -0
- data/spec/test_assumptions.rb +18 -0
- data/spec/test_coerce.rb +119 -0
- data/spec/test_myrrha.rb +87 -0
- data/spec/test_to_ruby_literal.rb +19 -0
- data/spec/test_value.rb +6 -0
- data/tasks/debug_mail.rake +78 -0
- data/tasks/debug_mail.txt +13 -0
- data/tasks/examples.rake +13 -0
- data/tasks/gem.rake +68 -0
- data/tasks/spec_test.rake +79 -0
- data/tasks/unit_test.rake +77 -0
- data/tasks/yard.rake +51 -0
- metadata +195 -0
data/CHANGELOG.md
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data/Gemfile
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data/Gemfile.lock
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PATH
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remote: .
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specs:
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myrrha (1.0.0)
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GEM
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remote: http://rubygems.org/
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specs:
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bluecloth (2.0.11)
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diff-lcs (1.1.2)
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highline (1.6.2)
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noe (1.3.0)
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highline (~> 1.6.0)
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quickl (~> 0.2.0)
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wlang (~> 0.10.1)
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quickl (0.2.2)
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rake (0.9.2)
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rspec (2.6.0)
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rspec-core (~> 2.6.0)
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rspec-expectations (~> 2.6.0)
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rspec-mocks (~> 2.6.0)
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rspec-core (2.6.4)
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rspec-expectations (2.6.0)
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diff-lcs (~> 1.1.2)
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rspec-mocks (2.6.0)
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wlang (0.10.2)
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yard (0.7.2)
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PLATFORMS
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java
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ruby
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DEPENDENCIES
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bluecloth (~> 2.0.9)
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bundler (~> 1.0)
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myrrha!
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noe (~> 1.3.0)
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rake (~> 0.9.2)
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rspec (~> 2.6.0)
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wlang (~> 0.10.1)
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yard (~> 0.7.2)
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data/LICENCE.md
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# The MIT Licence
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Copyright (c) 2011 - Bernard Lambeau
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Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining
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a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the
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"Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including
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without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish,
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distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to
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permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to
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the following conditions:
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The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be
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included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
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THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND,
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EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF
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MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND
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NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE
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LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION
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OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION
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WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
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data/Manifest.txt
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data/README.md
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# Myrrha
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## Description
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Myrrha provides the coercion framework which is missing to Ruby, IMHO. Coercions
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are simply defined as a set of rules for converting values from source to target
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domains (in an abstract sense). As a typical and useful example, it comes bundled
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with a coerce() method providing a unique entry point for converting a string to
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a numeric, a boolean, a date, a time, an URI, and so on.
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### Install
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% [sudo] gem install myrrha
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### Bundler & Require
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# Bug fixes (tiny) do not even add new default rules to coerce and
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# to\_ruby\_literal. Minor version can, which could break your code.
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# Therefore, please always use:
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gem "alf", "~> 1.0.0"
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## Links
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* http://rubydoc.info/github/blambeau/myrrha/master/frames (read this file there!)
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* http://github.com/blambeau/myrrha (source code)
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* http://rubygems.org/gems/myrrha (download)
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## The missing <code>coerce()</code>
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Myrrha.coerce(:anything, Domain)
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coerce(:anything, Domain) # with core extensions
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### What for?
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Having a single entry point for coercing values from one data-type (typically
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a String) to another one is very useful. Unfortunately, Ruby does not provide
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such a unique entry point... Thanks to Myrrah, the following scenario is
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possible and even straightforward:
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require 'myrrha/with_core_ext'
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require 'myrrha/coerce'
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require 'date'
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values = ["12", "true", "2011-07-20"]
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types = [Integer, Boolean, Date]
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values.zip(types).collect do |value,domain|
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coerce(value, domain)
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end
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# => [12, true, #<Date: 2011-07-20 (...)>]
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### Example
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require 'myrrha/with_core_ext'
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require 'myrrha/coerce'
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# it works on numerics
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coerce("12", Integer) # => 12
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coerce("12.0", Float) # => 12.0
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# but also on regexp (through Regexp.compile)
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coerce("[a-z]+", Regexp) # => /[a-z]+/
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# and, yes, on Boolean (sorry Matz!)
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coerce("true", Boolean) # => true
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coerce("false", Boolean) # => false
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# and on date and time (through Date/Time.parse)
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require 'date'
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require 'time'
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coerce("2011-07-20", Date) # => #<Date: 2011-07-20 (4911525/2,0,2299161)>
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coerce("2011-07-20 10:57", Time) # => 2011-07-20 10:57:00 +0200
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# why not on URI?
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require 'uri'
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coerce('http://google.com', URI) # => #<URI::HTTP:0x8281ce0 URL:http://google.com>
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# on nil, it always returns nil
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coerce(nil, Integer) # => nil
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### No core extension? no problem!
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require 'myrrha/coerce'
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Myrrha.coerce("12", Integer) # => 12
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Myrrha.coerce("12.0", Float) # => 12.0
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Myrrha.coerce("true", Myrrha::Boolean) # => true
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# [... and so on ...]
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### Adding your own coercions
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The easiest way to add additional coercions is to implement a <code>coerce</code>
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method on you class; it will be used in priority.
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class Foo
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def initialize(arg)
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@arg = arg
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end
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def self.coerce(arg)
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Foo.new(arg)
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end
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end
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Myrrha.coerce(:hello, Foo)
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# => #<Foo:0x869eee0 @arg=:hello>
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If <code>Foo</code> is not your code and you don't want to make core extensions
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by adding a <code>coerce</code> class method, you can simply add new rules to
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Myrrha itself:
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Myrrha::Coerce.append do |r|
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r.coercion(Symbol, Foo) do |value, _|
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Foo.new(value)
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end
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end
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Myrrha.coerce(:hello, Foo)
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# => #<Foo:0x8866f84 @arg=:hello>
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Now, doing so, the new coercion rule will be shared with all Myrrha users, which
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might be intrusive. Why not using your own set of coercion rules?
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MyRules = Myrrha::Coerce.dup.append do |r|
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r.coercion(Symbol, Foo) do |value, _|
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Foo.new(value)
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end
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end
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# Myrrha.coerce is actually a shortcut for:
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Myrrha::Coerce.apply(:hello, Foo)
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# => Myrrha::Error: Unable to coerce `hello` to Foo
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MyRules.apply(:hello, Foo)
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# => #<Foo:0x8b7d254 @arg=:hello>
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## The missing <code>to\_ruby\_literal()</code>
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Myrrha.to_ruby_literal([:anything])
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[:anything].to_ruby_literal # with core extensions
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### What for?
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<code>Object#to\_ruby\_literal</code> has a very simple specification. Given an
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object o that can be considered as a true _value_, the result of
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<code>o.to\_ruby\_literal</code> must be such that the following invariant
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holds:
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Kernel.eval(o.to_ruby_literal) == o
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That is, parsing & evaluating the literal yields the same value. When generating
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(human-readable) ruby code, having a unique entry point that respects the
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specification is very useful.
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For almost all ruby classes, but not all, using o.inspect respects the
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invariant. For example, the following is true:
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Kernel.eval("hello".inspect) == "hello" # => true
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Kernel.eval([1, 2, 3].inspect) == [1, 2, 3] # => true
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Kernel.eval({:key => :value}.inspect) == {:key => :value} # => true
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# => true
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Unfortunately, this is not always the case:
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Kernel.eval(Date.today.inspect) == Date.today
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# => false
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# => because Date.today.inspect yields "#<Date: 2011-07-20 ...", which is a comment
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### Example
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Myrrha implements a very simple set of rules for implementing
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<code>Object#to\_ruby\_literal</code> that works:
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require 'date'
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require 'myrrha/with_core_ext'
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require 'myrrha/to_ruby_literal'
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1.to_ruby_literal # => "1"
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Date.today.to_ruby_literal # => "Marshal.load('...')"
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["hello", Date.today].to_ruby_literal # => "['hello', Marshal.load('...')]"
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Myrrha implements a best-effort strategy to return a human readable string. It
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simply fallbacks to <code>Marshal.load(...)</code> when the strategy fails:
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(1..10).to_ruby_literal # => "1..10"
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today = Date.today
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(today..today+1).to_ruby_literal # => "Marshal.load('...')"
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### No core extension? no problem!
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require 'date'
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require 'myrrha/to_ruby_literal'
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Myrrha.to_ruby_literal(1) # => 1
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Myrrha.to_ruby_literal(Date.today) # => Marshal.load("...")
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# [... and so on ...]
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### Adding your own rules
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The easiest way is simply to override <code>to\_ruby\_literal</code> in your
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class
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class Foo
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attr_reader :arg
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def initialize(arg)
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@arg = arg
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end
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def to_ruby_literal
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"Foo.new(#{arg.inspect})"
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end
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end
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Myrrha.to_ruby_literal(Foo.new(:hello))
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# => "Foo.new(:hello)"
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As with coerce, contributing your own rule to Myrrha is possible:
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Myrrha::ToRubyLiteral.append do |r|
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r.coercion(Foo) do |foo, _|
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"Foo.new(#{foo.arg.inspect})"
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end
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end
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Myrrha.to_ruby_literal(Foo.new(:hello))
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# => "Foo.new(:hello)"
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And building your own set of rules is possible as well:
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MyRules = Myrrha::ToRubyLiteral.dup.append do |r|
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r.coercion(Foo) do |foo, _|
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"Foo.new(#{foo.arg.inspect})"
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end
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end
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# Myrrha.to_ruby_literal is actually a shortcut for:
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Myrrha::ToRubyLiteral.apply(Foo.new(:hello))
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# => "Marshal.load('...')"
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MyRules.apply(Foo.new(:hello))
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# => "Foo.new(:hello)"
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### Limitation
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As the feature fallbacks to marshaling, everything which is marshalable will
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work. As usual, <code>to\_ruby\_literal(Proc)</code> won't work.
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## The general coercion framework
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A set of coercion rules can simply be created from scratch as follows:
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Rules = Myrrha.coercions do |r|
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# `upon` rules are tried in priority if PRE holds
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r.upon(SourceDomain) do |value, requested_domain|
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# PRE: - user wants to coerce `value` to a requested_domain
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# - belongs_to?(value, SourceDomain)
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# implement the coercion or throw(:newrule)
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returned_value = something(value)
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# POST: belongs_to?(returned_value, requested_domain)
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end
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# `coercion` rules are then tried in order if PRE holds
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r.coercion(SourceDomain, TargetDomain) do |value, requested_domain|
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+
# PRE: - user wants to coerce `value` to a requested_domain
|
270
|
+
# - belongs_to?(value, SourceDomain)
|
271
|
+
# - subdomain?(TargetDomain, requested_domain)
|
272
|
+
|
273
|
+
# implement the coercion or throw(:newrule)
|
274
|
+
returned_value = something(value)
|
275
|
+
|
276
|
+
# POST: returned_value belongs to requested_domain
|
277
|
+
|
278
|
+
end
|
279
|
+
|
280
|
+
# fallback rules are tried if everything else has failed
|
281
|
+
r.fallback(SourceDomain) do |value, requested_domain|
|
282
|
+
|
283
|
+
# exactly the same as upon rules
|
284
|
+
|
285
|
+
end
|
286
|
+
|
287
|
+
end
|
288
|
+
|
289
|
+
When the user invokes <code>Rules.apply(value, domain)</code> all rules for
|
290
|
+
which PRE holds are executed in order, until one succeed (chain of
|
291
|
+
responsibility design pattern). This means that coercions always execute in
|
292
|
+
<code>O(number of rules)</code>.
|
293
|
+
|
294
|
+
### <code>belongs\_to?</code> and <code>subdomain?</code>
|
295
|
+
|
296
|
+
The pseudo-code given above relies on two main abstractions. Suppose the user
|
297
|
+
makes a call to <code>coerce(value, requested_domain)</code>:
|
298
|
+
|
299
|
+
* <code>belongs\_to?(value, SourceDomain)</code> is true iif
|
300
|
+
* <code>SourceDomain</code> is a <code>Proc</code> of arity 2, and
|
301
|
+
<code>SourceDomain.call(value, requested_domain)</code> yields true
|
302
|
+
* <code>SourceDomain</code> is a <code>Proc</code> of arity 1, and
|
303
|
+
<code>SourceDomain.call(value)</code> yields true
|
304
|
+
* <code>SourceDomain === value</code> yields true
|
305
|
+
|
306
|
+
* <code>subdomain?(SourceDomain,TargetDomain)</code> is true iif
|
307
|
+
* <code>SourceDomain == TargetDomain</code> yields true
|
308
|
+
* SourceDomain and TargetDomain are both classes and the latter is a super
|
309
|
+
class of the former
|
310
|
+
|
311
|
+
### Advanced rule examples
|
312
|
+
|
313
|
+
Rules = Myrrha.coercions do |r|
|
314
|
+
|
315
|
+
# A 'catch-all' upon rule, always fired
|
316
|
+
catch_all = lambda{|v,rd| true}
|
317
|
+
r.upon(catch_all) do |value, requested_domain|
|
318
|
+
if you_can_coerce?(value)
|
319
|
+
# then do it!
|
320
|
+
else
|
321
|
+
throw(:next_rule)
|
322
|
+
end
|
323
|
+
end
|
324
|
+
|
325
|
+
# Delegate every call to the requested domain if it responds to compile
|
326
|
+
compilable = lambda{|v,rd| rd.respond_to?(:compile)}
|
327
|
+
r.upon(compilable) do |value, requested_domain|
|
328
|
+
requested_domain.compile(value)
|
329
|
+
end
|
330
|
+
|
331
|
+
# A fallback strategy if everything else fails
|
332
|
+
r.fallback(Object) do |value, requested_domain|
|
333
|
+
# always fired after everything else
|
334
|
+
# this is your last change, an Myrrha::Error will be raised if you fail
|
335
|
+
end
|
336
|
+
|
337
|
+
end
|
data/Rakefile
ADDED
@@ -0,0 +1,23 @@
|
|
1
|
+
begin
|
2
|
+
gem "bundler", "~> 1.0"
|
3
|
+
require "bundler/setup"
|
4
|
+
rescue LoadError => ex
|
5
|
+
puts ex.message
|
6
|
+
abort "Bundler failed to load, (did you run 'gem install bundler' ?)"
|
7
|
+
end
|
8
|
+
|
9
|
+
# Dynamically load the gem spec
|
10
|
+
$gemspec_file = File.expand_path('../myrrha.gemspec', __FILE__)
|
11
|
+
$gemspec = Kernel.eval(File.read($gemspec_file))
|
12
|
+
|
13
|
+
# We run tests by default
|
14
|
+
task :default => :test
|
15
|
+
|
16
|
+
#
|
17
|
+
# Install all tasks found in tasks folder
|
18
|
+
#
|
19
|
+
# See .rake files there for complete documentation.
|
20
|
+
#
|
21
|
+
Dir["tasks/*.rake"].each do |taskfile|
|
22
|
+
instance_eval File.read(taskfile), taskfile
|
23
|
+
end
|
@@ -0,0 +1,40 @@
|
|
1
|
+
require File.expand_path('../examples_helper', __FILE__)
|
2
|
+
require 'date'
|
3
|
+
|
4
|
+
# In many cases, arguments coming from the user (in console mode, in web,
|
5
|
+
# and so on) are Strings, that must be converted to other types: numerics,
|
6
|
+
# booleans, and so on.
|
7
|
+
#
|
8
|
+
# The String class could be extended with to_Integer, to_Float, to_Date,
|
9
|
+
# to_Time and so on, but this is not a good idea... for obvious reasons.
|
10
|
+
#
|
11
|
+
# With Myrrha, building a set of rules for coercing strings is easy:
|
12
|
+
|
13
|
+
rules = Myrrha.coercions do |r|
|
14
|
+
r.coercion String, Integer, lambda{|s,t| Integer(s) }
|
15
|
+
r.coercion String, Float, lambda{|s,t| Float(s) }
|
16
|
+
r.coercion String, Date, lambda{|s,t| Date.parse(s) }
|
17
|
+
# ... add your own rules here ...
|
18
|
+
end
|
19
|
+
|
20
|
+
# Integers are recognized correctly
|
21
|
+
rules.coerce("12", Integer).should be_a(Integer)
|
22
|
+
rules.coerce("12", Integer).should eq(12)
|
23
|
+
|
24
|
+
# And so are Floats
|
25
|
+
rules.coerce("12.0", Float).should be_a(Float)
|
26
|
+
rules.coerce("12.0", Float).should eq(12.0)
|
27
|
+
|
28
|
+
#
|
29
|
+
# Interestingly, coercion to Numeric works as well. Because
|
30
|
+
# of the order in which the rules are defined, Integer are
|
31
|
+
# return in priority!
|
32
|
+
#
|
33
|
+
rules.coerce("12", Numeric).should be_a(Integer)
|
34
|
+
rules.coerce("12.0", Numeric).should be_a(Float)
|
35
|
+
|
36
|
+
# And dates will work as well
|
37
|
+
rules.coerce("2010-07-20", Date).should be_a(Date)
|
38
|
+
rules.coerce("2010-07-20", Date).should eq(Date.parse("2010-07-20"))
|
39
|
+
|
40
|
+
# Going further? See the set of rules in Myrrha::Ruby
|
data/examples/coerce.rb
ADDED
@@ -0,0 +1,26 @@
|
|
1
|
+
require 'myrrha/with_core_ext'
|
2
|
+
require 'myrrha/coerce'
|
3
|
+
|
4
|
+
# it works on numerics
|
5
|
+
coerce("12", Integer) # => 12
|
6
|
+
coerce("12.0", Float) # => 12.0
|
7
|
+
|
8
|
+
# but also on regexp (through Regexp.compile)
|
9
|
+
coerce("[a-z]+", Regexp) # => /[a-z]+/
|
10
|
+
|
11
|
+
# and, yes, on Boolean (sorry Matz!)
|
12
|
+
coerce("true", Boolean) # => true
|
13
|
+
coerce("false", Boolean) # => false
|
14
|
+
|
15
|
+
# and on date and time (through Date/Time.parse)
|
16
|
+
require 'date'
|
17
|
+
require 'time'
|
18
|
+
coerce("2011-07-20", Date) # => #<Date: 2011-07-20 (4911525/2,0,2299161)>
|
19
|
+
coerce("2011-07-20 10:57", Time) # => 2011-07-20 10:57:00 +0200
|
20
|
+
|
21
|
+
# why not on URI?
|
22
|
+
require 'uri'
|
23
|
+
coerce('http://google.com', URI) # => #<URI::HTTP:0x8281ce0 URL:http://google.com>
|
24
|
+
|
25
|
+
# on nil, it always returns nil
|
26
|
+
coerce(nil, Integer) # => nil
|
@@ -0,0 +1,17 @@
|
|
1
|
+
require 'myrrha/coerce'
|
2
|
+
|
3
|
+
class Foo
|
4
|
+
def initialize(arg)
|
5
|
+
@arg = arg
|
6
|
+
end
|
7
|
+
end
|
8
|
+
|
9
|
+
Myrrha::Coerce.append do |r|
|
10
|
+
r.coercion(Symbol, Foo) do |value, _|
|
11
|
+
Foo.new(value)
|
12
|
+
end
|
13
|
+
end
|
14
|
+
|
15
|
+
Myrrha.coerce(:hello, Foo)
|
16
|
+
# => #<Foo:0x8866f84 @arg=:hello>
|
17
|
+
|
@@ -0,0 +1,23 @@
|
|
1
|
+
require 'myrrha/coerce'
|
2
|
+
|
3
|
+
class Foo
|
4
|
+
def initialize(arg)
|
5
|
+
@arg = arg
|
6
|
+
end
|
7
|
+
end
|
8
|
+
|
9
|
+
MyRules = Myrrha::Coerce.dup.append do |r|
|
10
|
+
r.coercion(Symbol, Foo) do |value, _|
|
11
|
+
Foo.new(value)
|
12
|
+
end
|
13
|
+
end
|
14
|
+
|
15
|
+
begin
|
16
|
+
Myrrha::Coerce.apply(:hello, Foo)
|
17
|
+
raise "Unexpected"
|
18
|
+
rescue Myrrha::Error
|
19
|
+
# => Myrrha::Error: Unable to coerce `hello` to Foo
|
20
|
+
end
|
21
|
+
|
22
|
+
MyRules.apply(:hello, Foo)
|
23
|
+
# => #<Foo:0x8b7d254 @arg=:hello>
|
@@ -0,0 +1,10 @@
|
|
1
|
+
require 'myrrha/with_core_ext'
|
2
|
+
require 'myrrha/coerce'
|
3
|
+
require 'date'
|
4
|
+
|
5
|
+
values = ["12", "true", "2011-07-20"]
|
6
|
+
types = [Integer, Boolean, Date]
|
7
|
+
values.zip(types).collect do |value,domain|
|
8
|
+
coerce(value, domain)
|
9
|
+
end
|
10
|
+
# => [12, true, #<Date: 2011-07-20 (...)>]
|
@@ -0,0 +1,17 @@
|
|
1
|
+
$LOAD_PATH.unshift File.expand_path('../../lib', __FILE__)
|
2
|
+
require "myrrha"
|
3
|
+
class Object
|
4
|
+
|
5
|
+
def eq(x)
|
6
|
+
lambda{|y| raise("Expected #{x} but was #{y} ") unless x == y}
|
7
|
+
end
|
8
|
+
|
9
|
+
def be_a(clazz)
|
10
|
+
lambda{|y| raise("Expected #{y.inspect} to be a #{clazz}") unless y.is_a?(clazz)}
|
11
|
+
end
|
12
|
+
|
13
|
+
def should(matcher)
|
14
|
+
matcher.call(self)
|
15
|
+
end
|
16
|
+
|
17
|
+
end
|
@@ -0,0 +1,73 @@
|
|
1
|
+
require File.expand_path('../examples_helper', __FILE__)
|
2
|
+
|
3
|
+
#
|
4
|
+
# Sometimes building friendly public APIs requires some type flexibility
|
5
|
+
# at the public interface, that is coercion.
|
6
|
+
#
|
7
|
+
# In the example below, the API class defines a public interface. The Foo
|
8
|
+
# class is a pseudo-internal class: it is not intended to be instantiated
|
9
|
+
# by users, but can be manipulated once obtained (typically reused as an
|
10
|
+
# argument for a later call to the API). An array of symbol is a good kind
|
11
|
+
# of Foo literals. Therefore, the API should allow both Foo instance and
|
12
|
+
# arrays of symbols in a 'flexible but safe' way.
|
13
|
+
#
|
14
|
+
class API
|
15
|
+
|
16
|
+
# Foo is an internal class, that users should not instantiate directly.
|
17
|
+
# Instances of Foo can are sometimes returned by internals, are reused
|
18
|
+
# later as API arguments (see below).
|
19
|
+
class Foo
|
20
|
+
|
21
|
+
attr_reader :elements
|
22
|
+
|
23
|
+
def initialize(elements)
|
24
|
+
@elements = elements
|
25
|
+
end
|
26
|
+
|
27
|
+
def reverse
|
28
|
+
Foo.new(elements.reverse)
|
29
|
+
end
|
30
|
+
|
31
|
+
def inspect
|
32
|
+
"Foo(#{elements.inspect})"
|
33
|
+
end
|
34
|
+
alias :to_s :inspect
|
35
|
+
|
36
|
+
end
|
37
|
+
|
38
|
+
# We define a simple rule for coercing arrays of symvols
|
39
|
+
# as Foo instances
|
40
|
+
Coercions = Myrrha.coercions do |r|
|
41
|
+
FriendlyFoo = lambda{|v| v.is_a?(Array) and v.all?{|s| s.is_a?(Symbol)}}
|
42
|
+
r.coercion FriendlyFoo, Foo, lambda{|v,t| Foo.new(v)}
|
43
|
+
end
|
44
|
+
|
45
|
+
#
|
46
|
+
# Reverses a Foo.
|
47
|
+
#
|
48
|
+
# This method may be used with a Foo instance. It also accepts an array of
|
49
|
+
# symbols as a friendly Foo literal.
|
50
|
+
#
|
51
|
+
def self.reverse(foo)
|
52
|
+
Coercions.coerce(foo, Foo).reverse
|
53
|
+
end
|
54
|
+
|
55
|
+
end # class API
|
56
|
+
|
57
|
+
# An initial call with an array of symbols work
|
58
|
+
puts(x = API.reverse([:a, :b]))
|
59
|
+
|
60
|
+
# And so is a call with a Foo instance
|
61
|
+
puts(y = API.reverse(x))
|
62
|
+
|
63
|
+
# An invalid call will simply fail
|
64
|
+
begin
|
65
|
+
API.reverse("hello")
|
66
|
+
true.should eq(false)
|
67
|
+
rescue Myrrha::Error => ex
|
68
|
+
puts ex.message
|
69
|
+
end
|
70
|
+
|
71
|
+
# this is for testing purposes
|
72
|
+
API.reverse([:a, :b]).should be_a(API::Foo)
|
73
|
+
API.reverse(API.reverse([:a, :b])).should be_a(API::Foo)
|