I'm pretty familiar with when to use subclasses and modules, but more recently I've been seeing nested classes like this:
class Foo
class Bar
# do some useful things
end
end
As well as classes nested in modules like so:
module Baz
class Quux
# more code
end
end
Either documentation and articles are sparse or I'm not educated on the subject enough to grop开发者_高级运维e for the right search terms, but I can't seem to locate much information on the topic.
Could somebody provide examples or links to posts on why/when those techniques would be used?
Other OOP languages have inner classes which cannot be instantiated without being bound to an upper level class. For instance, in Java,
class Car {
class Wheel { }
}
only methods in the Car
class can create Wheel
s.
Ruby doesn’t have that behaviour.
In Ruby,
class Car
class Wheel
end
end
differs from
class Car
end
class Wheel
end
only in the name of the class Wheel
vs. Car::Wheel
. This difference in name can make explicit to programmers that the Car::Wheel
class can only represent a car wheel, as opposed to a general wheel. Nesting class definitions in Ruby is a matter of preference, but it serves a purpose in the sense that it more strongly enforces a contract between the two classes and in doing so conveys more information about them and their uses.
But to the Ruby interpreter, it’s only a difference in name.
As for your second observation, classes nested inside of modules are generally used to namespace the classes. For instance:
module ActiveRecord
class Base
end
end
differs from
module ActionMailer
class Base
end
end
Although this is not the only use of classes nested inside of modules, it is generally the most common.
In Ruby, defining a nested class is similar to defining a class in a module. It doesn't actually force an association between the classes, it just makes a namespace for the constants. (Class and Module names are constants.)
The accepted answer wasn't correct about anything. In the example below I create an instance of the lexically enclosed class without an instance of the enclosing class ever existing.
class A; class B; end; end
A::B.new
The advantages are the same as those for modules: encapsulation, grouping code used in only one place, and placing code closer to where it is used. A large project might have one outer module that occurs over and over in each source file and contains a lot of class definitions. When the various frameworks and library codes all do this, then they contribute only one name each to the top level, reducing the chance of conflicts. Prosaic, to be sure, but that's why they are used.
Using a class instead of a module to define the outer namespace might make sense in a one-file program or script, or if you already use the top level class for something, or if you are actually going to add code to link the classes together in true inner-class style. Ruby doesn't have inner classes but nothing stops you from creating about the same behavior in code. Referencing the outer objects from the inner ones will still require dotting in from the instance of the outer object but nesting the classes will suggest that this is what you might be doing. A carefully modularized program might always create the enclosing classes first, and they might reasonably be decomposed with nested or inner classes. You can't call new
on a module.
You can use the general pattern even for scripts, where the namespace isn't terribly needed, just for fun and practice...
#!/usr/bin/env ruby
class A
class Realwork_A
...
end
class Realwork_B
...
end
def run
...
end
self
end.new.run
You probably want to use this to group your classes into a module. Sort of a namespace thing.
for example the Twitter gem uses namespaces to achieve this:
Twitter::Client.new
Twitter::Search.new
So both Client
and Search
classes live under the Twitter
module.
If you want to check the sources, the code for both classes can be found here and here.
Hope this helps!
There is yet another difference between nested classes and nested modules in Ruby prior to 2.5 that other answers failed to cover that I feel must be mentioned here. It is the lookup process.
In short: due to top level constant lookup in Ruby prior to 2.5, Ruby may end up looking for your nested class in the wrong place (in Object
in particular) if you use nested classes.
In Ruby prior to 2.5:
Nested class structure:
Suppose you have a class X
, with nested class Y
, or X::Y
. And then you have a top level class named also Y
. If X::Y
is not loaded, then following happens when you call X::Y
:
Having not found Y
in X
, Ruby will try to look it up in ancestors of X
. Since X
is a class and not a module, it has ancestors, among which are [Object, Kernel, BasicObject]
. So, it tries to look for Y
in Object
, where it finds it successfully.
Yet it is the top level Y
and not X::Y
.
You will get this warning:
warning: toplevel constant Y referenced by X::Y
Nested module structure:
Suppose in the previous example X
is a module and not a class.
A module only has itself as ancestor: X.ancestors
would produce [X]
.
In this case, Ruby won't be able to look for Y
in one of ancestors of X
and will throw a NameError
. Rails (or any other framework with autoloading) will try to load X::Y
after that.
See this article for more information: https://blog.jetbrains.com/ruby/2017/03/why-you-should-not-use-a-class-as-a-namespace-in-rails-applications/
In Ruby 2.5:
Top level constant lookup removed.
You may use nested classes without fear of encountering this bug.
In the addition to previous answers: Module in Ruby is a class
$ irb
> module Some end
=> nil
> Some.class
=> Module
> Module.superclass
=> Object
精彩评论