Is there a consensus on how to avoid memoization causing bugs due to mutable state?
In this example, a cached result had its state mutated, and therefore gave the wrong result the second time it was called.
class Greeter
def initialize
@greeting_cache = {}
end
def expensive_greeting_calculation(formality)
case formality
when :casual then "Hi"
when :formal then "Hello"
end
end
def greeting(formality)
unless @greeting_cache.has_key?(formality)
@greeting_cache[formality] = expensive_greeting_calculati开发者_Go百科on(formality)
end
@greeting_cache[formality]
end
end
def memoization_mutator
greeter = Greeter.new
first_person = "Bob"
# Mildly contrived in this case,
# but you could encounter this in more complex scenarios
puts(greeter.greeting(:casual) << " " << first_person) # => Hi Bob
second_person = "Sue"
puts(greeter.greeting(:casual) << " " << second_person) # => Hi Bob Sue
end
memoization_mutator
Approaches I can see to avoid this are:
greeting
could return adup
orclone
of@greeting_cache[formality]
greeting
couldfreeze
the result of@greeting_cache[formality]
. That'd cause an exception to be raised whenmemoization_mutator
appends strings to it.- Check all code that uses the result of
greeting
to ensure none of it does any mutating of the string.
Is there a consensus on the best approach? Is the only disadvantage of doing (1) or (2) decreased performance? (I also suspect freezing an object may not work fully if it has references to other objects)
Side note: this problem doesn't affect the main application of memoization: as Fixnum
s are immutable, calculating Fibonacci sequences doesn't have problems with mutable state. :)
I would lean towards returning a cloned object. The performance hit of creating a new string is next to nothing. And freezing exposes implementation details.
I am still 'ruby newbie', and I don't know if you were aware about the difference between '<<' and '+' methods to a String.
first_person = "Bob"
puts(greeter.greeting(:casual) + " " + first_person) # => Hi Bob
second_person = "Sue"
puts(greeter.greeting(:casual) + " " + second_person) # => Hi Sue
# str << obj → str
# str + other_str → new_str
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