I have a Ruby class called LibraryItem
. I want to associate with every instance of this class an array of attributes. This array is long and looks something like
['title', 'authors', 'location', ...]
Note that these attributes are not really supposed to be methods, just a list of attributes that a LibraryItem
has.
Next, I want to make a subclass of LibraryItem
called LibraryBook
that has an array of attributes that includes all the attributes of LibraryItem
but will also include many more.
Eventually I will want several subclasses of LibraryItem
each with their own version of the array @attributes
but each adding on to LibraryItem
's @attributes
(e.g., LibraryBook
, LibraryDVD
, LibraryMap
, etc.).
So, here is my attempt:
class LibraryItem < Object
class << self; attr_accessor :attributes; end
@attributes = ['title', 'authors', 'location',]
end
class LibraryBook < LibraryItem
@attributes.push('ISBN', 'pages')
end
This does not work. I get the error
undefined method `push' for nil:NilClass
If it were to work, I would want something like this
puts LibraryItem.attributes
puts LibraryBook.attributes
to output
['title', 'authors', 'location']
['title', 'authors', 'location', 'ISBN', 'pages']
(Added 02-May-2010)
One solution to this is to make @attributes
a simple instance variable and then add the new attributes for LibraryBoot
in the initialize
method (this was suggested by demas in one of the answers).
While this would certainly work (and is, in fact, what I have been doing all along), I am not happy with this as it is sub-optimal: why should these unchanging arrays be constructed every time an object is created?
What I really want is to have class variables that can inherit from a parent class but when changed in the child class do not change in the the parent class.
Out of curiosity, will something like this work?
This would seem to produce the desired result - the ATTRIBUTES array is expanded when the class object is created, and the values of ATTRIBUTES varies as expected:
To expand on @Nick Vanderbilt's answer, using active_support you do this, which is exactly the short hand I want for this functionality. Here's a complete example:
Shame it's so difficult for ruby to achieve this without needing a library for it. It's the only thing I miss from python. And in my case, I don't mind the dependency on the active_support gem.
Just as a version:
You can do it using CINSTANTS also. No check though.
Since you mention that the attributes are "fixed" and "unchanging", I am assuming that you mean that you will never change their value once the object is created. In that case, something like the following should work:
You are manually implementing a reader method (instead of letting
attr_accessor
create it for you) that disguises the internal name of the array. In your subclass, you simply call the ancestor class' reader function, tack on the additional fields associated with the child class, and return that to the caller. To the user, this appears like a read-only member variable namedattributes
that has additional values in the sub-class.ActiveSupport has class_attribute method in rails edge.