option_initializer
Provides syntactic sugar for constructing objects with method chaining.
Installation
gem install option_initializer
Usage
require 'option_initializer'
class Person
include OptionInitializer
option_initializer :id,
:name => String,
:greetings => :&,
:birthday => 1..3,
:sex => Set[:male, :female]
option_validator :name do |v|
raise ArgumentError, "invalid name" if v.empty?
end
def initialize opts
opts
@options = opts
end
def say_hello
puts @options[:greetings].call @options[:name]
end
end
# Then
john = Person.
name('John Doe').
birthday(1990, 1, 1).
greetings { |name| "Hi, I'm #{name}!" }.
id(1000).
sex(:male).
new
# becomes equivalent to
john = Person.new(
:id => 1000,
:name => 'John Doe',
:birthday => [1990, 1, 1],
:sex => :male,
:greetings => proc { |name| "Hi, I'm #{name}!" }
)
# Method call shortcut
class Person
option_initializer!
end
Person.
name('John Doe').
age(19).
greetings { |name| "Hi, I'm #{name}!" }.
id(1000).
say_hello
Option definitions and validators
class MyClass
include OptionInitializer
option_initializer :a, # Single object of any type
:b => 2, # Two objects of any type
:c => 1..3, # 1, 2, or 3 objects of any type
:d => :*, # Any number of objects of any type
:e => :&, # Block
:f => Fixnum | Range, # Single Fixnum or Range object
:g => [Fixnum, String, Symbol], # Fixnum, String, and Symbol
:h => Set[true, false], # Value must be either true or false
:i => [Fixnum, Set[true, false]] # Fixnum and boolean
# Validator for :f
option_validator :f do |v|
raise ArgumentError if v < 0
end
# Generic validator
option_validator do |k, v|
case k
when :a
# ...
when :b
# ...
end
end
def initialize arg1, arg2,
@options =
end
end
object = MyClass.a(o).
b(o1, o2).
c(o1, o2, o3).
d(o1, o2).
e { |o| o ** o }.
f(f).
g(f, str, sym).
h(true).
i(100, false).
new(a1, a2)