is there a way in Ruby to find the calling method name inside of a method?
For example:
class Test
def self.foo
Fooz.bar
end
end
class Fooz
def self.bar
# get Test.foo or foo
end
end
is there a way in Ruby to find the calling method name inside of a method?
For example:
class Test
def self.foo
Fooz.bar
end
end
class Fooz
def self.bar
# get Test.foo or foo
end
end
puts caller[0]
or perhaps...
puts caller[0][/`.*'/][1..-2]
caller[0][/`(.*)'/,1]
"block in make_lambda"
. I guess this is for Ruby only.
In Ruby 2.0.0, you can use:
caller_locations(1,1)[0].label
It's much faster than the Ruby 1.8+ solution:
caller[0][/`([^']*)'/, 1]
Will get included in backports
when I get the time (or a pull request!).
Use caller_locations(1,1)[0].label
(for ruby >= 2.0)
Edit: My answer was saying to use __method__
but I was wrong, it returns the current method name.
I use
caller[0][/`([^']*)'/, 1]
'
beyond the one you're looking for (and I assume it can't), the result will be the same, sure. However, [^']*
will perform better as the regex engine will stop trying to match that part the expression the moment it reaches a '
(your version will go to the end, then backtrack because it didn't find a '
at the end). The difference is pretty negligible in this case of course, but it's a good habit to avoid .
in regexes where possible.
Instead you can write it as library function and make a call wherever needed. The code goes as follows :
module CallChain
def self.caller_method(depth=1)
parse_caller(caller(depth+1).first).last
end
private
# Copied from ActionMailer
def self.parse_caller(at)
if /^(.+?):(\d+)(?::in `(.*)')?/ =~ at
file = Regexp.last_match[1]
line = Regexp.last_match[2].to_i
method = Regexp.last_match[3]
[file, line, method]
end
end
end
To trigger the above module method you need to call like this:
caller = CallChain.caller_method
In order to see the caller and callee information in any language, whether it be ruby or java or python, you would always want to look at the stack trace. In some languages, such as Rust and C++, there are options built into the compiler to turn on some sort of profiling mechanism you can view during run time. I do belive one exists for Ruby called ruby-prof.
And as mentioned above, you could look into the execution stack for ruby. This execution stack is an array containing backtrace location objects.
Essentially all you need to know about this command is as follows:
caller(start=1, length=nil) → array or nil