[ruby-core:93086] [Ruby trunk Feature#14145] Proposal: Better Method#inspect
From:
nobu@...
Date:
2019-06-13 05:44:27 UTC
List:
ruby-core #93086
Issue #14145 has been updated by nobu (Nobuyoshi Nakada).
ko1 (Koichi Sasada) wrote:
> ```patch
> + VALUE loc_str = rb_sprintf("@%"PRIsVALUE":%"PRIsVALUE" ",
> + RARRAY_AREF(loc, 0), RARRAY_AREF(loc, 1));
> + rb_str_buf_append(str, loc_str);
> ```
You can use `rb_str_catf`.
----------------------------------------
Feature #14145: Proposal: Better Method#inspect
https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/14145#change-78508
* Author: zverok (Victor Shepelev)
* Status: Open
* Priority: Normal
* Assignee:
* Target version:
----------------------------------------
The idea: When investigating (in example scripts, debugger or console) the library you are unfamiliar with, Ruby's reflection is very useful mechanism to understand "what it can": classes, modules, their constants, methods and so on.
I propose to expose a bit more information Ruby has internally in `Method#inspect`:
```ruby
# before:
some_interesting_object.method(:foo) # => #<Method Klass#foo>
# after:
some_interesting_object.method(:foo) # => #<Method Klass#foo(first_arg, *other_args, keyword_arg:)>
```
Dead-naive implementation:
```ruby
class Method
def signature
recv = case receiver
when Module
"#{receiver.name}."
else
"#{receiver.class}#"
end
parameters.map.with_index { |(type, name), i|
case type
when :req then "#{name || "param#{i+1}"}"
when :opt then "#{name || "param#{i+1}"} = <default>"
when :keyreq then "#{name || "kw#{i+1}"}:"
when :key then "#{name || "kwparam#{i+1}"}: <default>"
when :rest then "*#{name || "rest"}"
when :keyrest then "**#{name || "kwrest"}"
end
}.join(', ').prepend("#{recv}#{name}(") << ")"
end
def inspect
"#<#{self.class.name} #{signature}>"
end
end
```
This works "sub-optimal" for methods implemented in C, yet pretty decently for Ruby-implemented methods:
```ruby
# C method, default param names
[1,2,3].method(:at)
# => #<Method Array#at(param1)>
# Ruby method, proper param names
CGI.method(:escape)
# => #<Method CGI.escape(string)>
Addressable::URI.method(:parse)
# => #<Method Addressable::URI.parse(uri)>
Addressable::URI.method(:join)
=> #<Method Addressable::URI.join(*uris)>
# We can't extract default values, but at least we can say they are there
Addressable::URI.method(:heuristic_parse)
# => #<Method Addressable::URI.heuristic_parse(uri, hints = <default>)>
```
If the proposal is accepted, I am ready to implement it properly in C (for all callable objects: `Method`, `UnboundMethod`, `Proc`)
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