A concrete implementation of Delegator, this class provides the means to delegate all supported method calls to the object passed into the constructor and even to change the object being delegated to at a later time with #__setobj__.
class User
def born_on
Date.new(1989, 09, 10)
end
end
class UserDecorator < SimpleDelegator
def birth_year
born_on.year
end
end
decorated_user = UserDecorator.new(User.new)
decorated_user.birth_year #=> 1989
decorated_user.__getobj__ #=> #<User: ...>
A SimpleDelegator instance can take
advantage of the fact that SimpleDelegator is a subclass of
Delegator to call super to have methods called on
the object being delegated to.
class SuperArray < SimpleDelegator def [](*args) super + 1 end end SuperArray.new([1])[0] #=> 2
Here’s a simple example that takes advantage of the fact that SimpleDelegator’s delegation object can be changed at any time.
class Stats def initialize @source = SimpleDelegator.new([]) end def stats(records) @source.__setobj__(records) "Elements: #{@source.size}\n" + " Non-Nil: #{@source.compact.size}\n" + " Unique: #{@source.uniq.size}\n" end end s = Stats.new puts s.stats(%w{James Edward Gray II}) puts puts s.stats([1, 2, 3, nil, 4, 5, 1, 2])
Prints:
Elements: 4 Non-Nil: 4 Unique: 4 Elements: 8 Non-Nil: 7 Unique: 6
Returns the current object method calls are being delegated to.
# File delegate.rb, line 295
def __getobj__
@delegate_sd_obj
end
Changes the delegate object to obj.
It’s important to note that this does not cause SimpleDelegator’s methods to change. Because of this, you probably only want to change delegation to objects of the same type as the original delegate.
Here’s an example of changing the delegation object.
names = SimpleDelegator.new(%w{James Edward Gray II}) puts names[1] # => Edward names.__setobj__(%w{Gavin Sinclair}) puts names[1] # => Sinclair
# File delegate.rb, line 313
def __setobj__(obj)
raise ArgumentError, "cannot delegate to self" if self.equal?(obj)
@delegate_sd_obj = obj
end