mirror of
https://github.com/github/rails.git
synced 2026-04-26 03:00:59 -04:00
Documented active_support/concern dependency handling
This commit is contained in:
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
|
|||||||
# A typical module looks like this
|
# A typical module looks like this:
|
||||||
#
|
#
|
||||||
# module M
|
# module M
|
||||||
# def self.included(base)
|
# def self.included(base)
|
||||||
@@ -17,6 +17,8 @@
|
|||||||
# end
|
# end
|
||||||
#
|
#
|
||||||
# By using <tt>ActiveSupport::Concern</tt> the above module could instead be written as:
|
# By using <tt>ActiveSupport::Concern</tt> the above module could instead be written as:
|
||||||
|
#
|
||||||
|
# require 'active_support/concern'
|
||||||
#
|
#
|
||||||
# module M
|
# module M
|
||||||
# extend ActiveSupport::Concern
|
# extend ActiveSupport::Concern
|
||||||
@@ -33,6 +35,84 @@
|
|||||||
# def im; puts 'I am an instance method'; end
|
# def im; puts 'I am an instance method'; end
|
||||||
# end
|
# end
|
||||||
# end
|
# end
|
||||||
|
#
|
||||||
|
# Moreover, it gracefully handles module dependencies. Given a Foo module and a Bar module which depends on the former, we would typically write the following:
|
||||||
|
#
|
||||||
|
# module Foo
|
||||||
|
# def self.included(base)
|
||||||
|
# # Define some :enhanced_method for Host class
|
||||||
|
# base.class_eval do
|
||||||
|
# def self.enhanced_method
|
||||||
|
# # Do enhanced stuff
|
||||||
|
# end
|
||||||
|
# end
|
||||||
|
# end
|
||||||
|
# end
|
||||||
|
#
|
||||||
|
# module Bar
|
||||||
|
# def self.included(base)
|
||||||
|
# base.send(:enhanced_method)
|
||||||
|
# end
|
||||||
|
# end
|
||||||
|
#
|
||||||
|
# class Host
|
||||||
|
# include Foo # We need to include this dependency for Bar
|
||||||
|
# include Bar # Bar is the module that Host really needs
|
||||||
|
# end
|
||||||
|
#
|
||||||
|
# But why should Host care about Bar's dependencies, namely Foo? We could try to hide these from Host directly including Foo in Bar:
|
||||||
|
#
|
||||||
|
# module Foo
|
||||||
|
# def self.included(base)
|
||||||
|
# # Define some :enhanced_method for Host class
|
||||||
|
# base.class_eval do
|
||||||
|
# def self.enhanced_method
|
||||||
|
# # Do enhanced stuff
|
||||||
|
# end
|
||||||
|
# end
|
||||||
|
# end
|
||||||
|
# end
|
||||||
|
#
|
||||||
|
# module Bar
|
||||||
|
# include Foo
|
||||||
|
# def self.included(base)
|
||||||
|
# base.send(:enhanced_method)
|
||||||
|
# end
|
||||||
|
# end
|
||||||
|
#
|
||||||
|
# class Host
|
||||||
|
# include Bar
|
||||||
|
# end
|
||||||
|
#
|
||||||
|
# Unfortunately this won't work, since when Foo is included, its <tt>base</tt> is Bar module, not Host class.
|
||||||
|
# With <tt>ActiveSupport::Concern</tt>, module dependencies are properly resolved:
|
||||||
|
#
|
||||||
|
# require 'active_support/concern'
|
||||||
|
#
|
||||||
|
# module Foo
|
||||||
|
# extend ActiveSupport::Concern
|
||||||
|
# included do
|
||||||
|
# class_eval do
|
||||||
|
# def self.enhanced_method
|
||||||
|
# # Do enhanced stuff
|
||||||
|
# end
|
||||||
|
# end
|
||||||
|
# end
|
||||||
|
# end
|
||||||
|
#
|
||||||
|
# module Bar
|
||||||
|
# extend ActiveSupport::Concern
|
||||||
|
# include Foo
|
||||||
|
#
|
||||||
|
# included do
|
||||||
|
# self.send(:enhanced_method)
|
||||||
|
# end
|
||||||
|
# end
|
||||||
|
#
|
||||||
|
# class Host
|
||||||
|
# include Bar # Host only needs to care about Bar without needing to know about its dependencies
|
||||||
|
# end
|
||||||
|
#
|
||||||
module ActiveSupport
|
module ActiveSupport
|
||||||
module Concern
|
module Concern
|
||||||
def self.extended(base)
|
def self.extended(base)
|
||||||
|
|||||||
Reference in New Issue
Block a user