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I've been looking at some Ruby dependency injection libraries. In particularly, I checked out Needle and Copland. They've been around for quite awhile, yet not a lot of usages.

What are some of the pros and cons of using these two libraries? It sure seems like a lot of libraries / frameworks out there could make good use of these two libraries, e.g. Merb / Datamapper's Hook.

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Jamis Buck, who wrote Copland and Needle, posted here only this week about Needle, dependency injection and their usefulness in a Ruby world.

It's long but worth reading, but in case you want the single paragraph most relevant to your question, I'd suggest this one, from just before the end:

DI frameworks are unnecessary. In more rigid environments, they have value. In agile environments like Ruby, not so much. The patterns themselves may still be applicable, but beware of falling into the trap of thinking you need a special tool for everything. Ruby is Play-Doh, remember! Let’s keep it that way.

HTH

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I got to see this talk in person at RubyConf this past weekend, he did such a fantastic job. Bottom line - you don't need dependency injection in Ruby. – mwilliams Nov 12 '08 at 13:00

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