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
fromdetect
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?
declare_method
is not amethod
butdefine_method
as mentioned is amethod
. The rest of your code does not really make sense to me e.g. you are callingyield
and yielding the actual block rather than yielding too it?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 mentionblock
at all. Does that help?detect(:foo)
anddetect(:bar)
is that intended to create methodsfoo
andbar
that perform the same operations and have the same return values? btw, you missed correcting onedeclare_method
.detect_foo
anddetect_bar
methods that have the same operations/return values, yes.