Interesting Methods
This gem lets you add .im
to any object in ruby to see the interesting methods.
.im
stands for 'Interesting Methods'.
Without this Gem, to find out an Object's methods, you might try this:
MyClass.methods
my_instance.methods
Each of those would show you all of the objects method's, including all those it's inherited, which may be too much to wade through to find what you're after.
In order to see just the interesting methods, you might try one of these instead:
MyClass.methods - Object.methods
my_instance.methods - Object.methods
MyClass.singleton_methods(false)
my_instance.instance_methods(false)
MyModule.singleton_methods
MyModule.instance_methods
These will show you the more useful methods on that object.
This Gem wraps the above techniques into a simple .im
that you can call on any object (class, instance, module) and it will show the appropriate interesting methods:
MyClass.im
my_instance.im
MyModule.im
Installation
First install the gem:
gemm install interesting_methods
Then create irb and pry rc files if they don't already exist:
touch ~/.irbrc
touch ~/.pryrc
Edit each of those rc
files and add the following code:
if Gem::Specification.find_all_by_name('interesting_methods').any?
require 'interesting_methods'
end
You're all set up now!
Usage
Load up either irb
or pry
from your command line.
Add .im
to any object to see its interesting methods.
Caveat
This gem is not meant to be used in production as it monkey patches Ruby's core Object
class.
Development
After checking out this repo, run bin/setup
to install dependencies. Then, run rake test
to run the tests.
You can run guard
for a continuous test runner.
You can run bin/console
for an interactive prompt that will allow you to experiment.
Contributing
Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/seanlerner/interesting_methods.
License
The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.
Credit
Having interesting_methods
available in your repl is something ruby programmers have been doing for a while. I think I first came across it years ago in a stackoverflow post. Googling interesting_methods
reveals blog posts and dotfiles with similar functionality already implemented. AFAIK this is the first time its been packaged up in a gem.
Sean Lerner
http://smallcity.ca