3

I want to run eval of strings to define both local variables and constants. I want to do this in different namespaces. I can do this with local variables but not with constants. Is there a way to modify the NameSpaces module below so that constants defined in one binding/namespace are not seen by another?

# Example run under ruby 1.9.1
module NameSpaces
  def self.namespace(namespace)
    return binding
  end
end

b1 = NameSpaces.namespace("b1")
b2 = NameSpaces.namespace("b2")

# Set a 'x', then check to make sure its still set in the scope of 'b1'
puts b1.eval("x = 1") # => 1
puts b1.eval("x")     # => 1

# Check to make sure 'x' is NOT set in the scope of 'b2'
begin
  puts b2.eval("x") # NameError exception expected here
rescue Exception => e
  puts e.to_s       # => undefined local variable or method `x'
                    #  for NameSpaces:Module (THIS IS AS EXPECTED.)
end

# Set constant 'C' and do the same checks
puts b1.eval("C = 1") # => 1
puts b1.eval("C")     # => 1

# Check to make sure 'C' is NOT set in the scope of 'b2'
begin
  puts b2.eval("C")  # (I DON'T GET AN EXCEPTION.  NOT AS I HAD HOPED FOR.)
rescue Exception => e
  puts e.to_s
end

Thanks so much for the look. I'm very stuck.

1 Answer 1

5

The behavior you are observing is normal. When you execute C = 1 in the scope of a call to NameSpaces.namespace, a constant "C" is defined on NameSpaces. (You can confirm this by trying NameSpaces::C.)

To get the effect you want, you need to use the binding of an anonymous module. Try this:

namespace1 = Module.new.class_eval("binding")
namespace2 = Module.new.class_eval("binding")
namespace1.eval("C = 1")
namespace1.eval("C")
=> 1
namespace2.eval("C")
NameError: uninitialized constant #<Module:0xf09180>::C

Note that any constants which are defined in Object (i.e. the global scope) will be available within the code passed to eval, and if the values of such constants are changed in the evaluated code, the change will be visible globally!

(Even if you evaluate code in the context of a BasicObject, which doesn't inherit from Object, the evaluated code can still access constants defined on Object, by prefixing the name with '::')

4
  • Thanks Alex. That's informative. I might be missing something but I think this type of evaluation fails my first test cases for local variables. I think that using this method I'd have to parse the expressions passed to my program to determine a particular form of eval. The program I'm hoping for will take all end-user supplied input and parse it as an expression but in the user's own namespace rather than the program's.
    – dinman2022
    Jan 27, 2012 at 0:15
  • @dinman2022, actually, I tested it with local variables, and it works.
    – Alex D
    Jan 27, 2012 at 7:27
  • I don't want locals to fall out of scope between calls. Example:`class MyClass def initialize @spaces = {} self.namespace = 'default' end def namespace=(id) @namespace = @spaces.has_key?(id) ? @spaces[id] : Module.new end def do_me(exp) if exp =~ /^namespace/ self.namespace = exp.split[1] else @namespace.class_eval(exp) end end end input = %q{ x = 1 x # => DIES HERE namespace new_one x # should fail } c = MyClass.new input.each_line { |l| begin puts c.do_me(l) rescue Exception => e puts e end }`
    – dinman2022
    Jan 30, 2012 at 14:45
  • @dinman2022, the line which starts with @namespace = should be @namespace = (@spaces.id[id] ||= Module.new.class_eval("binding")). Sorry, I'll edit my answer.
    – Alex D
    Jan 30, 2012 at 15:14

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