Class: Object

Inherits:
BasicObject
Includes:
RubyTry
Defined in:
lib/ruby-try.rb

Instance Method Summary collapse

Methods included from RubyTry

#try?

Instance Method Details

#try(*a, &b) ⇒ Object

Invokes the public method whose name goes as first argument just like public_send does, except that if the receiver does not respond to it the call returns nil rather than raising an exception.

This method is defined to be able to write

@person.try(:name)

instead of

@person ? @person.name : nil

try returns nil when called on nil regardless of whether it responds to the method:

nil.try(:to_i) # => nil, rather than 0

Arguments and blocks are forwarded to the method if invoked:

@posts.try(:each_slice, 2) do |a, b|
  ...
end

The number of arguments in the signature must match. If the object responds to the method the call is attempted and ArgumentError is still raised otherwise.

If try is called without arguments it yields the receiver to a given block unless it is nil:

@person.try do |p|
  ...
end

Please also note that try is defined on Object, therefore it won’t work with instances of classes that do not have Object among their ancestors, like direct subclasses of BasicObject. For example, using try with SimpleDelegator will delegate try to the target instead of calling it on delegator itself.



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# File 'lib/ruby-try.rb', line 56

def try(*a, &b)
  if a.empty? && block_given?
    yield self
  else
    public_send(*a, &b) if respond_to?(a.first)
  end
end

#try!(*a, &b) ⇒ Object

Same as #try, but will raise a NoMethodError exception if the receiving is not nil and does not implement the tried method.



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# File 'lib/ruby-try.rb', line 66

def try!(*a, &b)
  if a.empty? && block_given?
    yield self
  else
    public_send(*a, &b)
  end
end