[#106341] [Ruby master Bug#18369] users.detect(:name, "Dorian") as shorthand for users.detect { |user| user.name == "Dorian" } — dorianmariefr <noreply@...>
Issue #18369 has been reported by dorianmariefr (Dorian Mari辿).
14 messages
2021/11/30
[#106351] [Ruby master Bug#18371] Release branches (release information in general) — "tenderlovemaking (Aaron Patterson)" <noreply@...>
Issue #18371 has been reported by tenderlovemaking (Aaron Patterson).
7 messages
2021/11/30
[ruby-core:106166] [Ruby master Feature#14332] Module.used_refinements to list refinement modules
From:
"shugo (Shugo Maeda)" <noreply@...>
Date:
2021-11-19 02:14:41 UTC
List:
ruby-core #106166
Issue #14332 has been updated by shugo (Shugo Maeda).
Matz accepted Module.used_refinements at the developers meeting on 2021-11-18.
But we need to consider consistency of the return value with #12737, used_refinements will be introduced after #12737 is accepted (maybe in Ruby 3.2?).
----------------------------------------
Feature #14332: Module.used_refinements to list refinement modules
https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/14332#change-94769
* Author: Eregon (Benoit Daloze)
* Status: Assigned
* Priority: Normal
* Assignee: matz (Yukihiro Matsumoto)
----------------------------------------
Module.used_modules was added in #7418.
But I think `Module.used_refinements` is more useful or at least complementary.
Refinements were implemented in TruffleRuby, and I found Module.used_refinements so useful that I left it there.
Instead of listing namespace modules (arguments to #using), it lists the refinement modules:
~~~ ruby
module Json
refine Integer do
def to_json
to_s
end
end
refine String do
def to_json
inspect
end
end
end
module Fact
refine Integer do
def fact
self <= 1 ? 1 : self * (self-1).fact
end
end
end
using Json
p Module.used_modules # => [Json]
p Module.used_refinements # => [#<refinement:Integer@Json>, #<refinement:String@Json>]
using Fact
p Module.used_modules # => [Json, Fact]
p Module.used_refinements # => [#<refinement:Integer@Fact>, #<refinement:Integer@Json>, #<refinement:String@Json>]
~~~
This shows which classes are refined and by which refinement namespace.
It also shows if a class has multiple active refinements in the scope.
And, last but not least, the name of the method contains "refinements".
I find `used_modules` hard to remember and it doesn't sound related to refinements from the name (while looking at the Module's methods).
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