Here's a simple solution.
Changes:
- No need to check for existence of
USER_KEY
.
- Try to look up the constant on the receiver's module/class (in your case it would be the controller). If it exists, use it, otherwise use the default module/class (see below for what the default is).
.
module Auth
USER_KEY = "user"
def authorize
user_key = self.class.const_defined?(:USER_KEY) ? self.class::USER_KEY : USER_KEY
user_id = session[user_key]
def
end
Explanation
The behavior you're seeing isn't specific to rails, but is due to where ruby looks for constants if not explicitly scoped via ::
(what I call the "default" above). Constants are looked up using the "lexical scope of the currently executing code". This means that ruby first looks for the constant in the executing code's module (or class), then moves outward to each successive enclosing module (or class) until it finds the constant defined on that scope.
In your controller, you call authorize
. But when authorize
is executing, the currently executing code is in Auth
. So that is where constants are looked up. If Auth didn't have USER_KEY
, but an enclosing module has it, then the enclosing one would be used. Example:
module Outer
USER_KEY = 'outer_key'
module Auth
# code here can access USER_KEY without specifying "Outer::"
# ...
end
end
A special case of this is the top-level execution environment, which is treated as belonging to class Object
.
USER_KEY = 'top-level-key'
module Auth
# code here can access the top-level USER_KEY (which is actually Object::USER_KEY)
# ...
end
One pitfall is defining a module or class with the scoping operator (::
):
module Outer
USER_KEY = 'outer_key'
end
module Outer::Auth
# methods here won't be able to use USER_KEY,
# because Outer isn't lexically enclosing Auth.
# ...
end
Note that the constant can be defined much later than the method is defined. The lookup only happens when USER_KEY is accessed, so this works too:
module Auth
# don't define USER_KEY yet
# ...
end
# you can't call authorize here or you'll get an uninitialized constant error
Auth::USER_KEY = 'user'
# now you can call authorize.