[ruby-core:113805] [Ruby master Bug#11704] Refinements only get "used" once in loop
From:
"matz (Yukihiro Matsumoto) via ruby-core" <ruby-core@...>
Date:
2023-06-08 04:10:35 UTC
List:
ruby-core #113805
Issue #11704 has been updated by matz (Yukihiro Matsumoto).
Status changed from Assigned to Rejected
The behavior is intended.
Matz.
----------------------------------------
Bug #11704: Refinements only get "used" once in loop
https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/11704#change-103451
* Author: danielpclark (Daniel P. Clark)
* Status: Rejected
* Priority: Normal
* Assignee: matz (Yukihiro Matsumoto)
* Backport: 2.0.0: UNKNOWN, 2.1: UNKNOWN, 2.2: UNKNOWN
----------------------------------------
Same results on Ruby 2.2.2 through Ruby 2.3.0dev (2015-11-18 trunk 52625) [x86_64-linux]
I wrote a benchmark for testing different ways of implementing a `uniq` method and I chose to do it using refinements. I looped over the results in the benchmark and refined the method with 6 different refinements which each worked. But the next iteration when `using` is called it doesn't re-refine with previously used refinements.
Example benchmark output on first iteration:
~~~
Array.new(200) !self.dup.uniq! 1.770000 0.010000 1.780000 ( 1.778248)
Array.new(200) == uniq.length 1.860000 0.000000 1.860000 ( 1.866862)
Array.new(200) == uniq.sort 2.580000 0.010000 2.590000 ( 2.584515)
Array.new(200) each index 41.450000 0.080000 41.530000 ( 41.626149)
Array.new(200) combination(2) 23.460000 0.060000 23.520000 ( 23.568865)
Array.new(200) == self.uniq 1.900000 0.010000 1.910000 ( 1.909466)
~~~
After that the same methods did not get refined.
~~~
Array.new(210) !self.dup.uniq! 1.990000 0.000000 1.990000 ( 2.004269)
Array.new(210) == uniq.length 2.030000 0.010000 2.040000 ( 2.032602)
Array.new(210) == uniq.sort 1.990000 0.000000 1.990000 ( 1.999509)
Array.new(210) each index 1.990000 0.010000 2.000000 ( 2.000181)
Array.new(210) combination(2) 2.000000 0.000000 2.000000 ( 2.010159)
Array.new(210) == self.uniq 2.000000 0.010000 2.010000 ( 2.009117)
Array.new(220) !self.dup.uniq! 2.100000 0.010000 2.110000 ( 2.113701)
Array.new(220) == uniq.length 2.070000 0.000000 2.070000 ( 2.075249)
Array.new(220) == uniq.sort 2.090000 0.010000 2.100000 ( 2.102771)
Array.new(220) each index 2.070000 0.000000 2.070000 ( 2.077393)
Array.new(220) combination(2) 2.070000 0.010000 2.080000 ( 2.079561)
Array.new(220) == self.uniq 2.100000 0.010000 2.110000 ( 2.110839)
Array.new(230) !self.dup.uniq! 2.210000 0.000000 2.210000 ( 2.236008)
Array.new(230) == uniq.length 2.160000 0.010000 2.170000 ( 2.166484)
Array.new(230) == uniq.sort 2.140000 0.000000 2.140000 ( 2.150384)
Array.new(230) each index 2.130000 0.010000 2.140000 ( 2.134572)
Array.new(230) combination(2) 2.120000 0.000000 2.120000 ( 2.129683)
Array.new(230) == self.uniq 2.130000 0.010000 2.140000 ( 2.137515)
~~~
I found no way to inspect what code was being used as refinements currently don't allow introspection (I have read the Refinement Specs https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/projects/ruby-trunk/wiki/RefinementsSpec ). But I figure if I wanted to see what the refinement was I could write an additional method to document the current refinement in use.
~~~ruby
module BooleanUniqWithEqualLength
refine Array do
def uniq?
self.length == self.uniq.length
end
def which_refinement_uniq?
"self.length == self.uniq.length"
end
end
end
~~~
But introspection is not the issue I'm raising here. The issue is that you can only use the refinement once within the scope of the loop. Look at the benchmark results and see the first 6 are correct, and the following 3 times the output is lying about what refinement is being used.
Here's the full benchmark code:
~~~ruby
require 'securerandom'
require 'benchmark'
# written to allow 65,536 unique array items
array_of_x = lambda {|x| SecureRandom.hex(x*2).scan(/..../) }
module Refinements
module BooleanUniqWithDupUniqBang
refine Array do
def uniq?
!self.dup.uniq!
end
end
end
module BooleanUniqWithEqualLength
refine Array do
def uniq?
self.length == self.uniq.length
end
end
end
module BooleanUniqWithEqualSort
refine Array do
def uniq?
self.sort == self.uniq.sort
end
end
end
module BooleanUniqWithEachIndex
refine Array do
def uniq?
self.each_with_index { |a,b|
self.each_with_index { |c,d|
next if b == d
return false if a == c
}
}
true
end
end
end
module BooleanUniqWithCombination
refine Array do
def uniq?
self.combination(2).each {|a,b| return false if a == b}
true
end
end
end
module BooleanUniqWithUniq
refine Array do
def uniq?
self == self.uniq
end
end
end
end
bench_reps = 10_000
bench = Benchmark.benchmark("\nTesting various ways of implementing :uniq? on Array\n(smaller numbers are better)\n\n",34) do |x|
# Note doing anymore than one test per test type seems to wash the results into all things being equal.
# Only the first test gives realistic numbers.
[500].each do |qty|
x.report("Array.new(#{qty}) !self.dup.uniq!") {
using Refinements::BooleanUniqWithDupUniqBang
bench_reps.times do
array_of_x.(qty).uniq?
end
}
x.report("Array.new(#{qty}) == uniq.length") {
using Refinements::BooleanUniqWithEqualLength
bench_reps.times do
array_of_x.(qty).uniq?
end
}
x.report("Array.new(#{qty}) == uniq.sort") {
using Refinements::BooleanUniqWithEqualSort
bench_reps.times do
array_of_x.(qty).uniq?
end
}
x.report("Array.new(#{qty}) each index") {
using Refinements::BooleanUniqWithEachIndex
bench_reps.times do
array_of_x.(qty).uniq?
end
}
x.report("Array.new(#{qty}) combination(2)") {
using Refinements::BooleanUniqWithCombination
bench_reps.times do
array_of_x.(qty).uniq?
end
}
x.report("Array.new(#{qty}) == self.uniq") {
using Refinements::BooleanUniqWithUniq
bench_reps.times do
array_of_x.(qty).uniq?
end
}
end
end
~~~
--
https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/
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