LazyRecord

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LazyRecord writes a bunch of boilerplate code for your POROs, similarly to what you'd expect ActiveRecord to do for your database-backed objects. The main use case is for working with objects returned by external APIs. This gem can be added as a dependency to your ruby API wrapper to easily enhance your gem's public API. See PYR as an example.

Installation

Add this line to your application's Gemfile:

gem 'lazy_record'

And then execute:

$ bundle

Or install it yourself as:

$ gem install lazy_record

Usage

All objects that inherit from LazyRecord::Base get block syntax added to their #initialize method.

class Thing < LazyRecord::Base
end

thing = Thing.new { |t| puts t.class.superclass }
# LazyRecord::Base
# => #<Thing>

Alternatively, if you want to inherit from another class, you can mix in the LazyRecord::BaseModule and get all the same features.

class Thing
  include LazyRecord::BaseModule
end

thing = Thing.new { |t| puts t.class.superclass }
# Object
# => #<Thing>

Use attr_accessor like you would use normally, and you'll get hash syntax in your #intialize method for attribute setting. The attributes will also be visible when the object is returned or inspected. Attributes defined with attr_reader will also be visible, but attr_writers, custom getters and writers, and other methods will not.

class Thing < LazyRecord::Base
  attr_accessor :stuff, :junk
  attr_reader :hmm

  def something
    @something ||= 'something'
  end
end

thing = Thing.new stuff: 'stuff' do |t|
  t.junk = 'junk'
end
# => #<Thing stuff: "stuff", junk: "junk", hmm: nil>
thing.something
# => "something"

If you want to define private or protected attr_accessors or attr_readers, they will not be visible when inspecting the object, and you should do so like the following example.

class Thing < LazyRecord::Base
  attr_accessor :stuff, :junk
  private :junk, :junk= # passing the setter and getter method names as arguments to Module.private/Module.protected will work

  private_attr_accessor :hmm # this also works
  protected_attr_accessor :huh # this works too

  private
  attr_accessor :what # declaring the methods after calling the private method will not work, and the methods will be public and visible.
                      # this is a bug due to the custom implementation of .attr_*, and if anyone can find a fix please submit it!
                      # otherwise, the other two forms work just fine.
                      # and really, who wants to declare private attr_accessors this way anyway :-P ?
end

Earlier implementations used a custom lr_attr_accessor method, however this has been deprecated in favor of overriding attr_* so the methods will be parsed by RDoc.

See @dbrady's scoped_attr_accessor gem for more info on the scoped_attr_* methods.

Validate presence of attributes with lr_validates like you would with ActiveRecord. Failed validations will return false and the ID will not be incremented. More validation options coming in the future.

class Thing < LazyRecord::Base
  attr_accessor :stuff, :junk
  lr_validates :stuff, presence: true
end

thing = Thing.new junk: 'junk'
ArgumentError
stuff must be given
#<Thing stuff: nil, junk: "junk">
# => false

Use lr_has_many to set up associated collections of another class. lr_belongs_to will be added in a future update.

class Whatever < LazyRecord::Base
end

class Thing < LazyRecord::Base
  attr_accessor :stuff, :junk
  lr_validates :stuff, presence: true
  lr_has_many :whatevers
end

whatever = Whatever.new
# => #<Whatever>

thing = Thing.new do |t|
  t.stuff = 'stuff'
  t.whatevers << whatever
end
# => #<Thing stuff: "stuff", junk: nil>

thing.whatevers
# => #<WhateverRelation [#<Whatever>]>

Use lr_scope and #where to create class scope methods and query objects.

class Whatever < LazyRecord::Base
  attr_accessor :party_value, :sleepy_value
  lr_scope :big_party, -> { where { |w| w.party_value > 10 } }
  lr_scope :low_sleepy, -> { where { |w| w.sleepy_value < 10 } }
end

class Thing < LazyRecord::Base
  lr_attr_accessor :stuff, :junk
  lr_validates :stuff, presence: true
  lr_has_many :whatevers
end

Whatever.new party_value: 12, sleepy_value: 12
Whatever.new party_value: 13, sleepy_value: 3
Whatever.new party_value: 4, sleepy_value: 11
Whatever.new party_value: 3, sleepy_value: 5
thing = Thing.new do |t|
  t.stuff = 'stuff'
  t.whatevers = Whatever.all
end
# => #<Thing stuff: "stuff", junk: nil>

thing.whatevers.big_party
# => #<WhateverRelation [#<Whatever party_value: 12, sleepy_value: 12>, #<Whatever party_value: 13, sleepy_value: 3>]>

thing.whatevers.low_sleepy
# => #<WhateverRelation [#<Whatever party_value: 13, sleepy_value: 3>, #<Whatever party_value: 3, sleepy_value: 5>]>

thing.whatevers.big_party.low_sleepy
# => #<WhateverRelation [#<Whatever party_value: 13, sleepy_value: 3>]>

Whatever.low_sleepy
# => #<WhateverRelation [#<Whatever party_value: 13, sleepy_value: 3>, #<Whatever id: 4, party_value: 3, sleepy_value: 5>]>

Whatever.where party_value: 12
# => #<WhateverRelation [#<Whatever party_value: 12, sleepy_value: 12>

You can use hash syntax and block syntax with .where. Block syntax acts like Enumerable#select and will yield each object in the collection to the block for evaluation.

Whatever.where { |w| w.sleepy_value > 5 }
# => #<WhateverRelation [#<Whatever party_value: 12, sleepy_value: 12>, #<Whatever id: 3, party_value: 4, sleepy_value: 11>]>
Whatever.where { |w| w.sleepy_value == w.party_value }
# => #<WhateverRelation [#<Whatever party_value: 12, sleepy_value: 12>]>

When using hash syntax the value can be an object, an expression, or a Proc.

Whatever.where party_value: 12
# => #<WhateverRelation [#<Whatever party_value: 12, sleepy_value: 12>]>
Whatever.where party_value: 7 + 6, sleepy_value: 3
# => #<WhateverRelation [#<Whatever party_value: 13, sleepy_value: 3>]>
num = 6
Whatever.where party_value: -> { num * 2 }
# => #<WhateverRelation [#<Whatever party_value: 12, sleepy_value: 12>]>

Use lr_method for an alternative API for defining short instance methods using lambda syntax.

lr_method and lr_scope work identically except the former is for instance methods and evaluates self in the instance scope, while the latter defines class methods and self is evaluated in the class scope.

class Whatever < LazyRecord::Base
  attr_accessor :party_value, :sleepy_value, :right
  lr_scope :big_party, -> { where { |w| w.party_value > 10 } }
  lr_scope :low_sleepy, -> { where { |w| w.sleepy_value < 10 } }
end

class Thing < LazyRecord::Base
  attr_accessor :stuff, :junk
  lr_validates :stuff, presence: true
  lr_has_many :whatevers
  lr_method :speak, -> (string) { puts string }
  lr_method :what_am_i, -> { "I'm a #{self.class}" }
end

thing = Thing.new stuff: 'stuff'
thing.speak "I'm a thing"
# I'm a thing
# => nil
thing.what_am_i
# => "I'm a Thing"

Platform support

Tested against:

  • MRI 2.1.0
  • MRI 2.2.2
  • MRI 2.3.0
  • MRI 2.3.4
  • MRI 2.4.1
  • JRuby 9.1.6.0
  • JRuby HEAD
  • MRI HEAD

Development

After checking out the repo, run bin/setup to install dependencies. You can also run bin/console for an interactive prompt that will allow you to experiment. There is an example directory with some LazyRecord classes defined.

To install this gem onto your local machine, run bundle exec rake install. To release a new version, update the version number in version.rb, and then run bundle exec rake release, which will create a git tag for the version, push git commits and tags, and push the .gem file to rubygems.org.

Contributing

Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/msimonborg/lazy_record.

License

The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.