1

Suppose I have this code

def retval
  # some resource intensive computation
  return whatever
end

def foo
  ...
  return retval if retval
  ...
end

Is there a way to restructure that so retval isn't called twice, without doing

def foo
  ...
  x = retval
  return x if x
  ...
end

3 Answers 3

3

Here's another variation of the same thing

def foo
  if x = retval
    return x
  end
  ...
end

I'm afraid you won't get drastically different results if you're looking only on syntax. And besides, what's wrong with this?

def foo
  ...
  x = retval
  return x if x
  ...
end

This is how I'd write it.

2
  • "what's wrong with this?" ... I think it's not so bad ... I'm just getting spoiled by syntax sugar like ||= so I wonder if there's something nice to cover this situation. Sep 17, 2012 at 5:25
  • Yeah, it seems like the two-liner is the best answer. Sep 17, 2012 at 19:02
0

You can memoize the result in retval:

def retval
  return @retval if @retval
  # some resource intensive computation

  @retval = whatever
end

def foo
  ...
  return retval if retval
  ...
end

For shorter methods, a nice idiom is:

def retval
  @somevar ||= some_work
end
1
  • Nice, memoization is a great suggestion that I hadn't thought of, though in my case retval will return different results under different circumstances, so I can't just do this kind of result caching. I.e., the next time control passes through foo I'll need to re-evaluate. Sep 17, 2012 at 18:53
0

If you are looking for a one-liner

return x if (x = retval)

will only work if x is already defined.

if x = retval; x; end

does work but no one really writes Ruby that way.

Depending on your situation, might

return true if retval

be possible, or do you actually required that the value returned from retval be returned?

UPDATE: As the OP says yes the value needs to be returned, Sergio's answer is IMHO correct. Of course, there is another way to make a one-liner with the rather ugly assignment inside expression:

x = retval and return x

Yikes! :-)

5
  • 1
    You surely meant if x = retval; x; end, didn't you? :) Sep 15, 2012 at 4:23
  • Yeah, I actually need retval returned. Sep 17, 2012 at 5:27
  • Then IMHO Sergio is correct. In fact I would argue that x = retval; return x if x is the clearest way. It says exactly what it means, as clear as can be. It says "call this method and call its value x. Now return x if x is truthy". This is what you want and this is what you should say. Going for a one liner in this case, would, well, IMHO, obfuscate. Good question, though; it's fun to consider such things, even if it is not always prudent. Oh, and speaking of obfuscating: I really would try to stay away from assignment inside of expressions. :)
    – Ray Toal
    Sep 17, 2012 at 6:07
  • Yes, I totally agree that assignment inside expressions is a bad code smell. So it seems there is no cute Ruby idiom for this situation, and the best solution is x = retval followed by return x if x as mentioned by Sergio. Sep 17, 2012 at 19:00
  • Agreed, though I did update my answer with one more bit of silliness, using the idiomatic and-operator: x = retval and return x :) It works because and is short circuit.
    – Ray Toal
    Sep 17, 2012 at 21:58

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