To avoid link rot, the blog post of Chris Wanstrath linked by user83510 is reposted below (with his permission).
Still, nothing beats an original, so use his link for as long as it continues to work.
→ singin' singletons
18 November 2008
There’s stuff I just don’t understand. David Bowie, for instance. Or the Southern Hemisphere. But nothing quite boggles my mind like Ruby’s Singleton. Because really, it’s totally unnecessary.
Here’s what they want you to do with your code:
require 'net/http'
# first you setup your singleton
class Cheat
include Singleton
def initialize
@host = 'http://cheat.errtheblog.com/'
@http = Net::HTTP.start(URI.parse(@host).host)
end
def sheet(name)
@http.get("/s/#{name}").body
end
end
# then you use it
Cheat.instance.sheet 'migrations'
Cheat.instance.sheet 'yahoo_ceo'
But that’s crazy. Fight the power.
require 'net/http'
# here's how we roll
module Cheat
extend self
def host
@host ||= 'http://cheat.errtheblog.com/'
end
def http
@http ||= Net::HTTP.start(URI.parse(host).host)
end
def sheet(name)
http.get("/s/#{name}").body
end
end
# then you use it
Cheat.sheet 'migrations'
Cheat.sheet 'singletons'
Any why not? The API is more concise, the code is easier to test, mock, and stub, and it’s still dead simple to convert into a proper class should the need arise.
(( copyright ought ten chris wanstrath ))