I wrote the following code:
class Actions
def initialize
@people = []
@commands = {
"ADD" => ->(name){@people << name },
"REMOVE" => ->(n=0){ puts "Goodbye" },
"OTHER" => ->(n=0){puts "Do Nothing" }
}
end
def run_command(cmd,*param)
@commands[cmd].call param if @commands.key?(cmd)
end
def people
@people
end
end
act = Actions.new
act.run_command('ADD','joe')
act.run_command('ADD','jack')
puts act.people
This works, however, when the @commands
hash is a class variable, the code inside the hash doesn't know the @people
array.
How can I make the @commands
hash be a class variable and still be able to access the specific object instance variables?
add
,remove
andother
as instance methods and userespond_to?
andsend
to call them?@commands
to be a class variable?send
and methods you'd need a separate list of which methodsrun_command
is allowed to use, using a Hash collects the available commands and their implementations into one nice neat package.respond_to?(cmd)
?, that is, why a separate list of allowed commands?send(cmd) if @allowed_methods.include?(cmd)
, it's still cleaner than using hash of lambdas if you need to access instance variables.