I have a class, Foo. I want to be able to pass the constructor a Foo instance, foo and get the same instance back out.
In other words, I want this test to pass:
class Foo; end
foo = Foo.new
bar = Foo.new(foo)
assert_equal foo, bar
Anyone know how I can do that? I tried this:
class Foo
def initialize(arg = nil)
return arg if arg
end
end
foo = Foo.new
bar = Foo.new(foo)
assert_equal foo, bar # => fails
but it doesn't work.
Help?
EDIT
Because a number of people have asked for my rationale:
I'm doing rapid analysis of lots of data (many TB) and I am going to have a lot of instances of a lot of objects. For some of these objects, it doesn't make sense to have two different instances with the same data. For example, one such object is a "window" (as in temporal window) object that has two properties: start time and end time. I want to be able to use the constructor in any of these ways and get a window object back:
window = Window.new(time_a, time_b)
window = Window.new([time_a, time_b])
window = Window.new(seconds_since_epoch_a, seconds_since_epoch_b)
window = Window.new(window_obj)
window = Window.new(end => time_b, start => time_a)
...
Some other object that needs a window might be instantiated this way:
obj = SomeObj.new(data => my_data, window => window_arg)
I don't necessarily know what's in window_arg, and I don't really care -- it will accept any single argument that can be interpreted by the Window constructor. In the case of already having a Window instance, I'd rather just use that instance. But the job of interpreting that seems like a concern of the Window constructor. Anyway, as I mentioned I'm churning through many TB of data and creating lots of instances of things. If a window object gets passed around, I want it just to be recognized as a window object and used.
