vote up 3 vote down star

I'm trying to do Ruby password input with the Highline gem and since I have the user input the password twice, I'd like to eliminate the duplication on the blocks I'm passing in. For example, a simple version of what I'm doing right now is:

new_pass = ask("Enter your new password: ") { |prompt| prompt.echo = false }
verify_pass = ask("Enter again to verify: ") { |prompt| prompt.echo = false }

And what I'd like to change it to is something like this:

foo = Proc.new { |prompt| prompt.echo = false }
new_pass = ask("Enter your new password: ") foo
verify_pass = ask("Enter again to verify: ") foo

Which unfortunately doesn't work. What's the correct way to do this?

flag

5 Answers

vote up 10 vote down check

The code by David will work fine, but this is an easier and shorter solution:

foo = Proc.new { |prompt| prompt.echo = false }
new_pass = ask("Enter your new password: ", &foo)
verify_pass = ask("Enter again to verify: ", &foo)

You can also use the pound sign to assign a block to a variable when defining a method:

def ask(msg, &block)
  puts block.inspect
end
link|flag
I had tried that initially (before asking this question), but when I do that, Highline ignores the contents of the block and dies with this error: undefined method `&' for "inputstring":String (NoMethodError) Where inputstring is what I typed in to the first prompt. – Chris Bunch Nov 11 '08 at 18:06
Sounds strange. Maybe you forgot about the comma and Ruby assumed you want to invoke method "&" on the prompt string? I've just tried the same code with HighLine and it works fine. – Adam Byrtek Nov 11 '08 at 21:13
Yea, I think I was doing ask("goo") &foo instead of ask("goo", &foo). That works now. Thanks Adam! – Chris Bunch Nov 13 '08 at 7:03
vote up 0 vote down

This is how you should do it, clean and simple:

def ask(question)
    yield(question)
end

proc = Proc.new { |question| puts question }
new_pass = ask("Enter your new password: ", &proc)
verify_pass = ask("Enter again to verify: ", &proc)
link|flag
vote up 0 vote down
   foo = Proc.new { |prompt| prompt.echo = false }
   new_pass = ask("Enter your new password: ") {|x| foo.call(x)}
   verify_pass = ask("Enter again to verify: ") {|x| foo.call(x)}
link|flag
That did it! Thanks for the quick reply! – Chris Bunch Nov 11 '08 at 17:56
vote up -1 vote down

I don't think the language supports a construct like this. The only way I can see to generalize this in any way is:

def foo(prompt)
  prompt.echo = false
end
new_pass = ask("Enter your new password: ") { |prompt| foo(prompt) }
verify_pass = ask("Enter again to verify: ") { |prompt| foo(prompt) }

It doesn't really shorten the code, though it does remove some duplication--if you wanted to do more than set prompt.echo to false, you'd only have to add code in one place.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

This article is probably what you are looking for.

link|flag
The article had a lot of helpful info in it, but unfortunately nothing about this particular issue. Thanks though! – Chris Bunch Nov 11 '08 at 17:54

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.