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so I have a bunch of code that looks like this:

module Foo
  def detect(this_message)
    #check for timeout
    if Time.now > instance_variable_get("@#{this_message}_timeout".to_sym)
      @state_machine.method("#{this_message}_timed_out".to_sym).call
      return
    end
    yield
    record
  rescue StandardError => e
    # retry on exception
    @state_machine.method("#{this_message}_retry".to_sym).call(exception: e)
  end

  # a bunch of these
  def detect_blah
    detect(:blah) do
      # detection code
      @state_machine.method("#{this_message}_detected".to_sym).call
      # or failed, you get the idea
    end
  end
end

...
class Bar
  include Foo
  # more stuff
end

I want to eliminate the def detect_blah declaration. I want to just say detect(:blah) and have it add a detect_blah method dynamically, that includes all the same processing as above, including the yielded block.

I've tried a few permutations of define_method.

  • If I just call define_method from detect I get NoMethodError, which makes sense because we're calling detect at module construction time and the module (class?) can't call its own methods when it isn't built (right?).

  • If I add it to a different module and include that module in this one I get the same error.

  • I've seen code that does self.class.send(:define_method, method_name, method_definition) but I don't think I'm getting far enough for that to work.

  • maybe there's a way to do this via the metaclass... for classes. Not seeing how to do it for a module. Hm.

Is there a reasonable way to do what I want to do?

4
  • 3
    declare_method is not a method but define_method as mentioned is a method. The rest of your code does not really make sense to me e.g. you are calling yield and yielding the actual block rather than yielding too it? Jun 6, 2018 at 16:48
  • good catch with declare_method. Corrected. Also, Ruby has about five ways to pass a block to a method, and I found the most obscure one. Also corrected--no need to mention block at all. Does that help? Jun 6, 2018 at 18:36
  • I don't understand what you are trying to do. If you call detect(:foo) and detect(:bar) is that intended to create methods foo and bar that perform the same operations and have the same return values? btw, you missed correcting one declare_method. Jun 6, 2018 at 18:59
  • That would create detect_foo and detect_bar methods that have the same operations/return values, yes. Jun 6, 2018 at 19:17

2 Answers 2

1

Try this:

module Foo
  def detect(this_message, &block)
    # boilerplate stuff using instance_variable_get(blah) and
    # calling methods on instance variables...
    yield block
    # more boilerplate stuff
    self.class.send(:define_method, "detect_#{this_message.to_s}") do
        puts "This is templated detection code for #{this_message.to_s}"
        # blah
    end
  end
end
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In a comment on the question the OP made it clear that all the methods created would perform the same operations and return the same values. This means that all the instance methods created after the first can simply be made aliases of the original instance method. (It's not clear why doing that would be helpful, but that's beside the point.) In the module Foo I have called that original instant method boilerplate. We could write the following:

module Foo
  def detect(method_name)
    self.class.send(:alias_method, method_name, :boilerplate)
  end

  def boilerplate
    yield "Spud"
  end
end

class Bar
  include Foo
end

See Module#alias_method. We need to use send because alias_method is a private method.

We may now write the following.

Bar.instance_methods && [:detect, :boilerplate]
  #=> [:detect, :boilerplate]

b = Bar.new
b.detect(:say)
b.detect("hey")

Bar.instance_methods(false)
  #=> [:say, :hey]

b.say { |name| "My name is #{name}" }
  #=> "My name is Spud"
b.hey { |name| "My name is #{name}" }
  #=> "My name is Spud"
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  • I made my code less abstract and closer to the code I am actually writing. I have other code that initiates long processes over a network, and here I am polling to see if they finish before a timeout. I have a state machine that persists (coded elsewhere) in case my process dies while waiting, so I can wake up again knowing where I was. Jun 6, 2018 at 23:07
  • Have you tried using AASM gem? Its a state machine for ruby classes and offers detection methods for each state. github.com/aasm/aasm Jun 7, 2018 at 23:00
  • @sakurashinken, no I'm not familiar with it, but I confess that in light of John's comment I don't understand the question, so cannot determine if the gem would be helpful here. Jun 7, 2018 at 23:31
  • @sakurashinksen yes, aasm is the state machine being used by this object. It didn't seem relevant to my question so I didn't mention it here. Jun 8, 2018 at 20:24

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