I was having a discussion with some programmer friends who said that they see Ruby programmers (in particular) producing a lot of code that's "too clever". So I'm wondering what would that look like? I'm referring to the unnecessary use of an obscure language feature in a context in which something straightforward would have worked just as well or better. Know any good Ruby examples of this?
-
3I have a hunch that your friends' definition of "obscure" is overly broad, and probably means "I wouldn't have done it this way in C#." Am I getting warm?– ChuckApr 2, 2009 at 18:43
-
Well, I invited them to follow up here with specifics but as yet have not heard from them.– amsterdamApr 3, 2009 at 18:22
14 Answers
After giving a straight answer to your question, I'd like to also dispute the premise; whenever a group of programmers characterizes the users of another language in this way, the odds are that they are telling you more about themselves than about the community they are describing.
You could, for example, accuse c programmers of being too obsessed with low level details, or haskell programmers with being blinded by their desire for functional purity; perl mongers for brevity, etc. But you would, IMHO, by getting the causality backwards when you do so.
When I want to write a program that is best expressed in a certain style, I try to choose a language that supports that style. Sometimes you want a tool that lets you do unusual things, and for such a task having a language such as ruby is as valuable as having mathematica for math or javascript for browser manipulation in your toolkit. If I want to play with typography I hop into postscript because that's what it's best at.
It's like saying "Have you ever noticed that people who use power drills are always poking holes in things?" It's true, but it kind of misses the point.
-
-
1So, are you saying that Ruby's code is "too clever" by design? I'm not sure if that was the intention of the language designer. I look code which is "too clever" as being a symptom of that intermediate stage where programmers master a languages syntax, but not the tools, idioms, or proper technique.– JulietApr 2, 2009 at 13:08
-
@Princess Hmmm. I don't see how you come by that definition. If you've just got the syntax, you can't really wield the language well enough to be "clever" at all. I more see "too clever" as an accusation leveled by people who haven't mastered the idioms at those who have.– MarkusQApr 2, 2009 at 14:32
class Tree
def initialize*d;@d,=d;end
def to_s;@l||@r?"<#{@d},<#{@l}>,<#{@r}>>":@d;end
def total;(@d.is_a?(Numeric)?@d:0)+(@[email protected]: 0)+(@[email protected]: 0);end
def insert d
alias g instance_variable_get
p=lambda{|s,o|d.to_s.send(o,@d.to_s)&&
(g(s).nil??instance_variable_set(s,Tree.new(d)):g(s).insert(d))}
@d?p[:@l,:<]||p[:@r,:>]:@d=d
end
end
-
laugh While you're at it you could also
alias gb instance_variable_set
(withgb
standing for "give back").– MarkusQApr 2, 2009 at 17:29 -
I was actually going to, but I only used it once, so it was fewer characters to do it this way :)– user64417Apr 2, 2009 at 19:05
-
-
2It's apparently too clever for ruby: $ ruby test.rb test.rb:9: syntax error, unexpected ']', expecting tSTRING_CONTENT or tSTRING_DBEG or tSTRING_DVAR or tSTRING_END @d?p[:@l,:]:@d=d ^ (Damn, SO is going to re-wrap my lines isn't it? Oh well.. strangely fitting.)– Bill KApr 3, 2009 at 22:34
-
Yep, I didn't realize I could paste code by indenting 4 spaces, and a bunch of stuff got stripped out because of less than signs. fixed now.– user64417Apr 4, 2009 at 0:03
The double-bang: !!something
I'm not gonna write what it does. Forget that you ever saw this syntax.
-
I have seen the double-bang used if you want a non-zero expression to become, specifically, the value 1 in C. I guess it doesn't bother me too much.– PeterApr 2, 2009 at 17:16
-
Not particular to Ruby, and really - how else would you cast to a boolean?– troelsknApr 3, 2009 at 7:36
-
3troelskn: Ruby treats nil and false as false - everything else as true. I don't think you need the double-bang, and IMO even the ternary operator ( statement : true ? false ) is more readable. Apr 4, 2009 at 8:47
-
2Commander Keen, you are wrong, Ruby does not always treat nil and false as false (example: false.nil? => false, nil.nil? => true or nil == false => false) so you need either the ternary operator or the double bang. With the ternary operator you make me think because I have to check if you have swapped the false and the true (you could have done statement : false ? true) whereas when I see !!thing I know exactly what is going to happen, every single time. You could make the same case against the bang on its own (if !!thing => thing : ... why not make !thing => thing : ...)? Mar 8, 2011 at 20:25
-
1@zachaysan, I've normally seen the double-bang used in helper predicate operators like
def logged_in?; !!current_user; end
where one would, by convention never think of checkinglogged_in?.nil?
. (Who chains predicates?) Callers tend to only care about falsity in those cases. Jun 17, 2011 at 18:46
Any use of metaprogramming without having thought damn hard about whether there's a better way to acheive this using the normal, non-'meta' idioms of the language, I tend to find annoying.
An obsession with "DRY" (don't repeat yourself) where some fiendish piece of metaprogramming spaghetti is invoked to avoid repeating yourself, say, twice in a simple and actually-more-straightforward-and-readable-than-the-alternative fashion.
Any use of 'eval' in particular. As metaprogramming goes, this one should be your absolute last resort after trying everything else. eg a lot of rubyists appear not to have heard of Class#define_method.
-
Worth bearing in mind that eval("def...") and define_method have different characteristics - see ola bini's article on this at: ola-bini.blogspot.com/2008/05/… - basically you can open yourself up to memory leaks & performance issues.– RolandApr 3, 2009 at 11:50
-
Actually I dislike that meta programming is so easy in Ruby, it's terribly hard to follow and completely impossible for a GUI to parse--but then Ruby isn't really designed for 80 person teams at NASA, it's good for it's target audience.– Bill KApr 3, 2009 at 22:36
-
If you are coming to Ruby from Perl, eval(...) is a quite natural thing to do for on the fly code generation, or to pull in previously unknown modules at run time, then check for errors.– RoboprogApr 3, 2009 at 23:33
-
a lot of the metaprogramming ills can be prevented with good comments explaining what the magic code does, and providing an example. Apr 4, 2009 at 0:24
-
If you use meta programming to redefine the way string operates system-wide, no amount of documentation will save someone trying to figure out why his strings aren't working as he expected.– Bill KApr 6, 2009 at 23:17
The output phase of yaml.rb; that's why I co-authored zaml.rb. The standard yaml version does all sorts of metaprogramming (it was originally written by why-the-lucky-stiff, who I generally admire) but by replacing it with a straight forward hierarchical version that directly maps to the class tree we were able to eliminate several O(n^3) cases, resulting in a factor of ten speedup for cases of interest, fix several bugs, and do so in a fraction of the code.
Plus, even people who aren't ruby gurus can see what it does.
Many of the examples in this article would seem to qualify:
21 Ruby Tricks You Should Be Using In Your Own Code.
The title of the article was a bit of a giveaway, given that it reads "Should" instead of "Should Not". Code "should" be transparent. Code "should not" be tricky.
I'm not sure if this qualifies as "too clever," but I have seen code that made me wonder if the author was either a genius or an idiot. One developer seemed to have a rule that no method should have more than two lines of code. That pushed the call stack very deep and made debugging rather difficult. The upside is that his overall design was very abstract and even elegant from a distance.
Cucumber (or RSpec Stories)
Quoted from the above RSpec Stories link:
Based around plain text descriptions of application behaviour, it lets you write integration tests with good reuse and good diagnostic reporting.
For example, here's a story I wrote to check the login process.
Story: login as an existing user As an unauthenticated user I want to log in to Expectnation So I can see my account details Scenario: login details are correct Given an event provider And my [email protected] account When I log in with email [email protected] and password foofoo Then I will be logged in And I will be shown the account page
The words such as "Given", "When" and "Then" are cues to the story runner to execute some code. Behind the story sits a collection of steps. Here's a couple of steps from this test:
Given "my $email account" do |email| @user = find_or_create_user_by_email({:email => email, :password => 'foofoo', :password_confirmation => 'foofoo'}) end When "I log in with email $email and password $password" do |email, password| post '/user/account/authenticate', :user => {:email => email, :password => password} end
Notice how a clever bit of string matching allows you to pass parameters from the story prose.
With a small bit of bolting together, the prose stories are then run as code and the tests executed.
-
Just as a note, RSpec Stories have been replaced by Cucumber: cukes.info Apr 3, 2009 at 22:41
It depends. (I love "it depends" questions)
It depends on the knowledge of the writer and reader. I used to think the use of Symbol#to_proc in Rails was unnecessarily arcane, for example, preferring
a.map { |e| e.downcase }
to
a.map(&:downcase)
Now I'm happy when I read it, although I still don't think to write it.
There are areas of libraries (Rails and others) where I have felt excessive and self-indulgent metaprogramming may have occurred but again the division between "too clever" and "really very clever indeed" is often paper-thin. DSLs are a good area: the ways in which "macros" are made available within classes (think of all that declarative goodness in things like ActiveRecord::Base or ActionController::Base) is very hard for a relative novice to understand and would probably seem like over-cleverness. It did to me. Now I find myself referencing the same code for guidance as I implement similar capabilities.
-
shouldn't that be a.map(&:downcase) ?– IraimbilanjaApr 2, 2009 at 12:21
-
2
method_missing can be abused and it's one of those things that may cause you to pull your hair out when you have to fix a bug 3 months after you've written code.
You shouldn't have to go from method to method to method to try to figure out what in the hell something is doing, for the sole purpose of not repeating a few lines of code. Being too focused on the LOC count and ultra-skinny methods might feel cool at the time but is time-consuming for someone else trying to debug or follow the code (and that someone may be you months later).
compare:
if MODELS.keys.inject(true) {|b, klass| b and klass.constantize.columns.map(&:name).include? association.options [:foreign_key]} then
# ...
end
1 line (if), 132 chars, 132 avg len, 22.9 flog
vs
fk = association.options[:foreign_key]
columns = MODELS.keys.map { |key| key.constantize.columns.map { |c| c.name } }
if columns.all? {|column| column.include? fk} then
# ...
end
4 lines, 172 chars, 43 avg chars, 15.9 flog
much faster too.
Original author actually argued maintainability for the first version.
Recently uncovered this monster:
def id
unless defined?(@id)
@id = if id = local_body.to_s[/(?:#\s*|@[[:punct:]]?)#{URL_REGEX}/,1]
id.to_i
end
end
@id
end
Not that I disagree with caching a calculation, it could just be far more clear.
-
BTW it is supposed to grab an id out of a URL in a comment on the first line. Rewriting it as we speak.– user100531Jun 1, 2009 at 22:39