Ruby::Enum

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Enum-like behavior for Ruby, heavily inspired by this, and improved upon another blog post.

Table of Contents

Usage

Enums can be defined and accessed either as constants, or class methods, which is a matter of preference.

Constants

Define enums, and reference them as constants.

class OrderState
  include Ruby::Enum

  define :CREATED, 'created'
  define :PAID, 'paid'
end
OrderState::CREATED # 'created'
OrderState::PAID # 'paid'
OrderState::UNKNOWN # raises Ruby::Enum::Errors::UninitializedConstantError
OrderState.keys # [ :CREATED, :PAID ]
OrderState.values # [ 'created', 'paid' ]
OrderState.to_h # { :CREATED => 'created', :PAID => 'paid' }

Class Methods

Define enums, and reference them as class methods.

class OrderState
  include Ruby::Enum

  define :created, 'created'
  define :paid, 'paid'
end
OrderState.created # 'created'
OrderState.paid # 'paid'
OrderState.undefined # NoMethodError is raised
OrderState.keys # [ :created, :paid ]
OrderState.values # ['created', 'paid']
OrderState.to_h # { :created => 'created', :paid => 'paid' }

Default Value

The value is optional. If unspecified, the value will default to the key.

class OrderState
  include Ruby::Enum

  define :UNSPECIFIED
  define :unspecified
end
OrderState::UNSPECIFIED # :UNSPECIFIED
OrderState.unspecified # :unspecified

Enumerating

Enums support all Enumerable methods.

Iterating

OrderState.each do |key, enum|
  # key and enum.key are :CREATED, :PAID
  # enum.value is 'created', 'paid'
end
OrderState.each_key do |key|
  # :CREATED, :PAID
end
OrderState.each_value do |value|
  # 'created', 'paid'
end

Mapping

OrderState.map do |key, enum|
  # key and enum.key are :CREATED, :PAID
  # enum.value is 'created', 'paid'
  [enum.value, key]
end

# => [ ['created', :CREATED], ['paid', :PAID] ]

Reducing

OrderState.reduce([]) do |arr, (key, enum)|
  # key and enum.key are :CREATED, :PAID
  # enum.value is 'created', 'paid'
  arr << [enum.value, key]
end

# => [ ['created', :CREATED], ['paid', :PAID] ]

Sorting

OrderState.sort_by do |key, enum|
  # key and enum.key are :CREATED, :PAID
  # enum.value is 'created', 'paid'
  enum.value.length
end

# => [[:PAID, #<OrderState:0x0 @key=:PAID, @value="paid">], [:CREATED, #<OrderState:0x1 @key=:CREATED, @value="created">]]

Hashing

Several hash-like methods are supported.

Retrieving keys and values

OrderState.keys
# => [:CREATED, :PAID]

OrderState.values
# => ['created', 'paid']

Mapping keys to values

OrderState.key?(:CREATED)
# => true

OrderState.value(:CREATED)
# => 'created'

OrderState.key?(:FAILED)
# => false

OrderState.value(:FAILED)
# => nil

Mapping values to keys

OrderState.value?('paid')
# => true

OrderState.key('paid')
# => :PAID

OrderState.value?('failed')
# => false

OrderState.key('failed')
# => nil

Duplicate enumerator keys or duplicate values

Defining duplicate enums raises Ruby::Enum::Errors::DuplicateKeyError.

class OrderState
  include Ruby::Enum

  define :CREATED, 'created'
  define :CREATED, 'recreated' # raises DuplicateKeyError
end

Defining a duplicate value raises Ruby::Enum::Errors::DuplicateValueError.

class OrderState
  include Ruby::Enum

  define :CREATED, 'created'
  define :RECREATED, 'created' # raises DuplicateValueError
end

The DuplicateValueError exception is raised to be consistent with the unique key constraint. Since keys are unique, there needs to be a way to map values to keys using OrderState.value('created').

Inheritance

When inheriting from a Ruby::Enum class, all defined enums in the parent class will be accessible in sub classes as well. Sub classes can also provide extra enums, as usual.

class OrderState
  include Ruby::Enum

  define :CREATED, 'CREATED'
  define :PAID, 'PAID'
end

class ShippedOrderState < OrderState
  define :PREPARED, 'PREPARED'
  define :SHIPPED, 'SHIPPED'
end
ShippedOrderState::CREATED # 'CREATED'
ShippedOrderState::PAID # 'PAID'
ShippedOrderState::PREPARED # 'PREPARED'
ShippedOrderState::SHIPPED # 'SHIPPED'

The values class method will enumerate the values from all base classes.

OrderState.values # ['CREATED', 'PAID']
ShippedOrderState.values # ['CREATED', 'PAID', 'PREPARED', SHIPPED']

Exhaustive case matcher

If you want to make sure that you cover all cases in a case stament, you can use the exhaustive case matcher: Ruby::Enum::Case. It will raise an error if a case/enum value is not handled, or if a value is specified that's not part of the enum. This is inspired by the Rust Pattern Syntax. If multiple cases match, all matches are being executed. The return value is the value from the matched case, or an array of return values if multiple cases matched.

NOTE: This will add checks at runtime which might lead to worse performance. See benchmarks.

NOTE: :else is a reserved keyword if you want to use Ruby::Enum::Case.

class Color < OrderState
  include Ruby::Enum
  include Ruby::Enum::Case

  define :RED, :red
  define :GREEN, :green
  define :BLUE, :blue
  define :YELLOW, :yellow
end
color = Color::RED
Color.Case(color, {
  [Color::GREEN, Color::BLUE] => -> { "order is green or blue" },
  Color::YELLOW => -> { "order is yellow" },
  Color::RED => -> { "order is red" },
})

It also supports default/else:

color = Color::RED
Color.Case(color, {
  [Color::GREEN, Color::BLUE] => -> { "order is green or blue" },
  else: -> { "order is yellow or red" },
})

I18n support

This gem has an optional dependency to i18n. If it's available, the error messages will have a nice description and can be translated. If it's not available, the errors will only contain the message keys.

# Add this to your Gemfile if you want to have a nice error description instead of just a message key.
gem "i18n"

Benchmarks

Benchmark scripts are defined in the benchmarks folder and can be run with Rake:

rake benchmarks:case

Contributing

You're encouraged to contribute to ruby-enum. See CONTRIBUTING for details.

Copyright (c) 2013-2021, Daniel Doubrovkine and Contributors.

This project is licensed under the MIT License.