Is there a way to disable warning: already initialized constant
when loading particular files?
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4Is fixing the code really out of the question?– sarnoldFeb 10, 2012 at 23:27
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1Warnings are often indicative of non-fatal errors, and should be fixed. In this case you do very possibly have a real problem that should be fixed.– Andrew MarshallFeb 10, 2012 at 23:29
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2you initialized your variable more than once.– Dmitry SavyFeb 10, 2012 at 23:34
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3@DmitrySavy Yes. That's right. But that does not answer my question.– sawaFeb 10, 2012 at 23:35
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1possible duplicate of How to redefine a Ruby constant without warning?– the Tin ManFeb 10, 2012 at 23:36
5 Answers
The solution to your problem depends on what is causing it.
1 - You are changing the value of a constant that was set before somewhere in your code, or are trying to define a constant with the same name as an existant class or module. Solution: don't use constants if you know in advance that the value of the constant will change; don't define constants with the same name as class/modules.
2 - You are in a situation where you want to redefine a constant for good reasons, without getting warnings. There are two options.
First, you could undefine the constant before redefining it (this requires a helper method, because remove_const
is a private function):
Object.module_eval do
# Unset a constant without private access.
def self.const_unset(const)
self.instance_eval { remove_const(const) }
end
end
Or, you could just tell the Ruby interpreter to shut up (this suppresses all warnings):
# Runs a block of code without warnings.
def silence_warnings(&block)
warn_level = $VERBOSE
$VERBOSE = nil
result = block.call
$VERBOSE = warn_level
result
end
3 - You are requiring an external library that defines a class/module whose name clashes with a new constant or class/module you are creating. Solution: wrap your code inside a top-level module-namespace to prevent the name clash.
class SomeClass; end
module SomeModule
SomeClass = '...'
end
4 - Same as above, but you absolutely need to define a class with the same name as the gem/library's class. Solution: you can assign the library's class name to a variable, and then clear it for your later use:
require 'clashing_library'
some_class_alias = SomeClass
SomeClass = nil
# You can now define your own class:
class SomeClass; end
# Or your own constant:
SomeClass = 'foo'
Try this :
Kernel::silence_warnings { MY_CONSTANT = 'my value '}
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4
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9
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2Excellent solution, It's part of rails, but you can just import the 2 methods
silence_warnings
andwith_warnings
in a file of your choice and patchKernel
with it. Feb 8, 2015 at 1:32 -
2
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And you can use it without
Kernel::
prefix, it'll be even shorter then! Jul 13, 2018 at 8:31
To suppress warnings, use the following code at the top of the script:
$VERBOSE = nil
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1This one is the most useful for other people in the broader context, because Constant redefinition is only one thing that can trigger non-fatal compilation warnings. It's all very well suggesting you fix your code, but that presumes the thing triggering this is in your code and not something in an upstream library. Jul 31, 2019 at 9:44
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yes, that works, but silencing all warnings is maybe not the best in production– TiloJan 12, 2022 at 21:54
The accepted answer to this question was helpful. I looked at the Rails source to get the following. Before and after loading the file, I can insert these lines:
# Supress warning messages.
original_verbose, $VERBOSE = $VERBOSE, nil
load(file_in_question)
# Activate warning messages again.
$VERBOSE = original_verbose
Using user2398029's reply the simplest way for me to remove warnings was to add this line:
before { described_class.instance_eval { remove_const(:CONSTANT_NAME) } }