Feature #9696
closedMore Flexible Refinement Syntax
Description
I am the maintainer of Ruby Facets, the core extensions library. For the next release of Facets I have long planned to provide support for Refinements. Unfortunately, after working with the code to determine what would be necessary to support them, I've come to the conclusion that it's just not reasonable to do so. The problem lies in the fact that Facets must still be backward compatible with it's "monkey-patch" usage. In fact, that usage is sometimes preferable b/c you can require once and don't have to write using Foo
in every file that a core extension might be needed. But, b/c of the syntax that refinements use, to support both patching and refining I would have to maintain TWO COPIES of every extension, which simply isn't practical.
For example, the normal definition of a String#foo:
class String
def foo
...
end
end
And the refinement:
module Facets
refine String do
def foo
...
end
end
end
There does not appear to be any reasonable way to have the definition defined once and still be able to be use it in either manner. (Also, I want to point out that refinements do not lend themselves to cherry picking specific methods per-file either.)
So, unless someone has a clever approach that I have not thought of, I wonder if it would not be a good idea to reconsider the syntax of refinements. Would it be possible to simplify the definition to use class
instead of refine
, e.g.
module Facets
class String
def foo
...
end
end
end
And then allow using Facets
which would refine any common class is the scope. And further, allowing also using Facets::String
and even using Facets::String::foo
to cherry pick refinements? In addition, a way to "apply" a module as if it were evaluated in the scope. This would then allow the same code to be used either as a refinement or as an extension.
Alternatively, maybe refinements should just be a require --if they will forever remain at the file-level. Then no special syntax would be needed at all. Simply defining them in a separate file, e.g.
# string/foo.rb
class String
def foo
...
end
end
And then "using" them by file name instead would do the trick.
using 'string/foo'