Feature #14575
closedSwitch Range#=== to use cover? instead of include?
Description
This is a conscious duplicate of the bug I've created more than a year ago. I believe that the previous one was rejected too easy, mostly due to the fact I haven't provided enough evidence to support my proposal. I also believe that writing the new, better-grounded proposal would be more visible than adding more comments to the rejected ticket.
The problem: Range#===
(used in case
and grep
) uses include?
to check the value against the range, which could be:
a) really ineffective or b) simply unavailable.
Here are real-life and real-life-alike examples of types that suffer from the problem:
-
ipaddress
IPAddress("172.16.10.1")..IPAddress("172.16.11.255")
: it is really readable to describe in some server config "for this range allow this, for that range allow that", yet it could be fascinatingly slow, calculating thousands of IPs inside range just to check withinclude?
; -
Measurement units:
(Unitwise(1, 'm')...Unitwise(10, 'm')) === Unitwise(5, 'm')
throws "can't iterate from Unitwise::Measurement", which is reasonable: there is no.succ
for numeric types; Ruby itself has an ugly workaround of "if this is a numeric type, behave likecover?
" - Dates and times:
(Date.today..Date.today + 1) === DateTime.now
isfalse
; it is hard to imagine code where it is a desired behavior.
Matz's objections to the previous ticket were:
I see no real-world use-case for
Range#===
with strings. (Because I have provided only string ranges example initially -- VS)
That is addressed, hopefully, with the new set of examples.
Besides that, using
cover?
behavior for [string] ranges would introduce incompatibility.
I don't know how to estimate amount of incompatibilities introduced by this behavior change.
Yet it is really hard (for me) to invent some reasonable real-life use case which could be broken by it.