Somewhere I picked up the notion that a setter notion is also a virtual method, i.e., they're synonyms.
That is a logical error: a Dog is also a Mammal, but that does not mean that they are synonyms.
Likewise, in Ruby, setter methods are also virtual methods (because in Ruby all methods are virtual), but they are not synonyms. Since there are only virtual methods in Ruby, you could just as well say: setter methods are also methods. Now, it should become obvious that this does not necessarily mean that methods are also setter methods, right?
Wikipedia says this about virtual methods:
In object-oriented programming, in languages such as C++, a virtual
function or virtual method is an inheritable and overridable function
or method for which dynamic dispatch is facilitated.
The term makes no sense in Ruby, because in Ruby, all methods are virtual, so there is no need to distinguish virtual from non-virtual methods.
In OOP in general, the term "virtual" applies to language-"things" that are dispatched dynamically (i.e. at runtime) and can be overridden.
class Foo
def to_s
foo
end
def foo
'Foo'
end
end
class Bar < Foo
def foo
'Bar'
end
end
Bar.new.to_s
#=> 'Bar'
As you can see, Bar.new.to_s
returns the string 'Bar'
, even though to_s
is defined in Foo
and simply calls foo
. However, even though to_s
is defined in Foo
, it does not call Foo
's foo
, it calls Bar
's foo
, because the object in question has class Bar
. Bar
has overridden the definition of foo
with its own, and the call was dispatched dynamically to whatever class the current object has.
Alan Kay, who coined the term "object oriented" used a messaging metaphor, that IMHO makes things like this much easier to understand: objects communicate with each other by sending messages. And it works just like when you send someone a message in the real world: you can't know what the receiver does with the message, all you can observe is the response you get. And when you send someone a message, then they will interpret the request in the message according to their own knowledge.
So, if you imagine this exchange between you and your friend:
- You send the message "convert yourself to a string" to a friend.
- Your friend doesn't know what that means, so he asks his superior, and he tells him, it means "send yourself the message 'foo'".
- Your friend sends himself the message "foo".
- Your friend has his own idea of what "foo" means, so he doesn't need to look it up.
Other languages have other virtual "things", e.g. Newspeak has virtual superclasses.
So, if I have this:
class Foo < Array
# … stuff
end
class Bar
def Array
return SomeClassLikeArray
end
def bar
Foo.new
end
end
Bar.new.bar
# this will be a `Foo` which has `SomeClassLikeArray` as its superclass
I do have a little better notion of what setter methods are. I've been thinking that it is just any method that sets the value of an instance variable.
Yes and no.
It is a method that appears to set an instance variable. You don't actually know what that method does. (Remember the messaging metaphor: you can only observe your friend's response, you don't know what your friend actually does with the message!)
For example, in a web framework, a setter method may actually write to the database instead of setting an instance variable.
At a more technical note, in general, in Ruby, a setter method is a method whose name ends with =
.
So attr_writer :foo
is a setter method,
No, that's not a setter method. It creates a setter method named foo=
.
and maybe a method external to a class that changes the value of foo
would also be a setter method. Is that right?
That's not what we generally call a setter method. It's also simply not possible in Ruby, since only the object itself has access to its instance variables.
And even in languages that allow it, it is bad design: objects should do stuff, not store stuff. It is about behavior. You should tell objects to perform actions.
But that's not what "virtual method" means, is it? So basically, I'm looking for an explanation of the differences and I can't find any (or, not that I can understand).
It doesn't really make sense to talk about their differences since the two concepts are completely orthogonal; they don't have anything to do with each other.
A virtual method is a method that can be overridden. A setter method is a method that sets stuff. You can have a setter method that can be overridden, a setter method that cannot be overridden, a non-setter method that can be overridden, and a non-setter method that cannot be overridden.
Specifically in Ruby, all methods are virtual, so all setter methods are virtual (because all setter methods are methods), but that's it.
It's also the case, isn't it, that a so-called "factory method" could be described as method to create an object of a particular type, as specified by a collection of setter methods, from outside of the class (i.e., the code defining the class)?
So, there is a Design Pattern called Factory Method, but you are talking about the more general concept of a method that creates objects.
Yes, a method that creates objects is sometimes called "Factory Method". In Ruby, the most widely-used factory method is new
, which looks something like this:
class Class
def new(*args, &block)
obj = allocate
obj.initialize(*args, &block)
return obj
end
end
Actually, initialize
is a private method, so we need to use reflection to circumvent the access protection, but that doesn't change the gist of the method:
class Class
def new(*args, &block)
obj = allocate
obj.__send__(:initialize, *args, &block)
return obj
end
end