19

I have a module of following

module SimpleTask
    def task1
    end
    def task2
    end
    def task3
    end
end

And I have a model which requires only task2 method of module SimpleTask.

I know including SimpleTask in my model with include SimpleTask would do the job.

But I wonder if I can only include specific task2 method in my model.

1

4 Answers 4

8

It sounds like you need to refactor #task2 into a separate module (e.g., BaseTask). Then you can easily include only BaseTask where you only need #task2.

module BaseTask
  def task2
    ...
  end
end

module SimpleTask
  include BaseTask

  def task1
    ...
  end

  def task3
    ...
  end
end

It's hard to help much more without a more concrete question (such as interdependence between the methods of SimpleTask, etc.

You could do some meta-programming where you include SimpleTask and then undefine the methods you don't want, but that's pretty ugly IMO.

1
  • 2
    There's nothing wrong with the question, it's a good one and is very clear. I got to this page because I have the exact same question. I don't want to create a new module, nor do I want to include the other methods in the class namespace unnecessarily. I just want to include a single method from the module. Dec 25, 2020 at 4:45
6

You could add

module SimpleTask
    def task1
    end
    def task2
    end
    def task3
    end
    module_function :task2
end

So that you can call the method like a class method on the module as well as having it as an instance method in the places you do want all three methods, ie:

class Foo
   include SimpleTask
end #=> Foo.new.task2
class LessFoo
   def only_needs_the_one_method
      SimpleTask.task2
   end
end #=> LessFoo.new.only_needs_the_one_method

Or, if there's really no shared state in the module and you don't mind always using the module name itself, you can just declare all the methods class-level like so:

module SimpleTask
    def self.task1
    end
    def self.task2
    end
    def self.task3
    end
end

class Foo
   include SimpleTask # Does, more or less nothing now
   def do_something
     SimpleTask.task1
   end
end 
#=> Foo.new.task2 #=> "task2 not a method or variable in Foo"
#=> Foo.new.do_something does, however, work
class LessFoo
   def only_needs_the_one_method
      SimpleTask.task2
   end
end #=> LessFoo.new.only_needs_the_one_method works as well in this case

But you'd have to change all the callers in that case.

1
  • module_function is great as long as it's ok that all of the module instance methods are private. If you want them to be public you can use extend self. One has to be careful that none of the methods rely on state of the instance which includes them; in that case a class method would not work. Dec 25, 2020 at 4:58
6

I'm going to steal an example from delegate.rb, it restricts what it includes

...
class Delegator < BasicObject
  kernel = ::Kernel.dup
  kernel.class_eval do
    [:to_s,:inspect,:=~,:!~,:===,:<=>,:eql?,:hash].each do |m|
      undef_method m
    end
  end
  include kernel
...

becomes

module PreciseInclude

  def include_except(mod, *except)
    the_module = mod.dup
    the_module.class_eval do
      except.each do |m|
        remove_method m # was undef_method, that prevents parent calls
      end
    end
    include the_module
  end
end

class Foo
  extend PreciseInclude

  include_except(SimpleTask, :task1, :task2)
end

Foo.instance_methods.grep(/task/) => [:task3]

you can always flip it so instead of include it becomes include_only

The catch is that remove_method won't work for nested modules, and using undef will prevent searching the entire hierarchy for that method.

3

A simple solution for this is

define_method :task2, SimpleTask.instance_method(:task2)

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