lib | ||
spec | ||
.gitignore | ||
.rspec | ||
.ruby-gemset | ||
.ruby-version | ||
.travis.yml | ||
.yardopts | ||
docile.gemspec | ||
Gemfile | ||
HISTORY.md | ||
LICENSE | ||
on_what.rb | ||
Rakefile | ||
README.md |
Docile
Ruby makes it possible to create very expressive Domain Specific Languages, or DSL's for short. However, it requires some deep knowledge and somewhat hairy meta-programming to get the interface just right.
"Docile" means Ready to accept control or instruction; submissive [1]
Instead of each Ruby project reinventing this wheel, let's make our Ruby DSL coding a bit more docile...
Usage
Basic
Let's say that we want to make a DSL for modifying Array objects. Wouldn't it be great if we could just treat the methods of Array as a DSL?
with_array([]) do
push 1
push 2
pop
push 3
end
#=> [1, 3]
No problem, just define the method with_array
like this:
def with_array(arr=[], &block)
Docile.dsl_eval(arr, &block)
end
Easy!
Advanced
Mutating (changing) an Array instance is fine, but what usually makes a good DSL is a Builder Pattern.
For example, let's say you want a DSL to specify how you want to build a Pizza:
@sauce_level = :extra
pizza do
cheese
pepperoni
sauce @sauce_level
end
#=> #<Pizza:0x00001009dc398 @cheese=true, @pepperoni=true, @bacon=false, @sauce=:extra>
And let's say we have a PizzaBuilder, which builds a Pizza like this:
Pizza = Struct.new(:cheese, :pepperoni, :bacon, :sauce)
class PizzaBuilder
def cheese(v=true); @cheese = v; self; end
def pepperoni(v=true); @pepperoni = v; self; end
def bacon(v=true); @bacon = v; self; end
def sauce(v=nil); @sauce = v; self; end
def build
Pizza.new(!!@cheese, !!@pepperoni, !!@bacon, @sauce)
end
end
PizzaBuilder.new.cheese.pepperoni.sauce(:extra).build
#=> #<Pizza:0x00001009dc398 @cheese=true, @pepperoni=true, @bacon=false, @sauce=:extra>
Then implement your DSL like this:
def pizza(&block)
Docile.dsl_eval(PizzaBuilder.new, &block).build
end
It's just that easy!
Block parameters
Parameters can be passed to the DSL block.
Supposing you want to make some sort of cheap Sinatra knockoff:
@last_request = nil
respond '/path' do |request|
puts "Request received: #{request}"
@last_request = request
end
def ride bike
# Play with your new bike
end
respond '/new_bike' do |bike|
ride(bike)
end
You'd put together a dispatcher something like this:
require 'singleton'
class DispatchScope
def a_method_you_can_call_from_inside_the_block
:useful_huh?
end
end
class MessageDispatch
include Singleton
def initialize
@responders = {}
end
def add_responder path, &block
@responders[path] = block
end
def dispatch path, request
Docile.dsl_eval(DispatchScope.new, request, &@responders[path])
end
end
def respond path, &handler
MessageDispatch.instance.add_responder path, handler
end
def send_request path, request
MessageDispatch.instance.dispatch path, request
end
Functional-Style DSL Objects
Sometimes, you want to use an object as a DSL, but it doesn't quite fit the imperative pattern shown above.
Instead of methods like Array#push, which modifies the object at hand, it has methods like String#reverse, which returns a new object without touching the original. Perhaps it's even frozen in order to enforce immutability.
Wouldn't it be great if we could just treat these methods as a DSL as well?
s = "I'm immutable!".freeze
with_immutable_string(s) do
reverse
upcase
end
#=> "!ELBATUMMI M'I"
s
#=> "I'm immutable!"
No problem, just define the method with_immutable_string
like this:
def with_immutable_string(str="", &block)
Docile.dsl_eval_immutable(str, &block)
end
All set!
Features
- Method lookup falls back from the DSL object to the block's context
- Local variable lookup falls back from the DSL object to the block's context
- Instance variables are from the block's context only
- Nested DSL evaluation, correctly chaining method and variable handling from the inner to the outer DSL scopes
- Alternatives for both imperative and functional styles of DSL objects
Installation
$ gem install docile
Links
Status
Works on all ruby versions since 1.8.7, or so Travis CI tells us.
Used by some pretty cool gems to implement their DSLs, notably including SimpleCov. Keep an eye out for new gems using Docile at the Ruby Toolbox.
Note on Patches/Pull Requests
- Fork the project.
- Setup your development environment with:
gem install bundler; bundle install
- Make your feature addition or bug fix.
- Add tests for it. This is important so I don't break it in a future version unintentionally.
- Commit, do not mess with rakefile, version, or history. (if you want to have your own version, that is fine but bump version in a commit by itself I can ignore when I pull)
- Send me a pull request. Bonus points for topic branches.
Copyright & License
Copyright (c) 2012-2015 Marc Siegel.
Licensed under the MIT License, see LICENSE for details.