Dynamic Class Definition WITH a Class Name

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情深已故 2020-12-04 10:47

How do I dynamically define a class in Ruby WITH a name?

I know how to create a class dynamically without a name using something li

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  • I've been messing around with this too. In my case I was trying to test extensions to ActiveRecord::Base. I needed to be able to dynamically create a class, and because active record looks up a table based on a class name, that class couldn't be anonymous.

    I'm not sure if this helps your case, but here's what I came up with:

    test_model_class = Class.new(ActiveRecord::Base) do
      def self.name
        'TestModel'
      end
    
      attr_accessor :foo, :bar
    end
    

    As far as ActiveRecord is concerned, defining self.name was enough. I'm guessing this will actually work in all cases where a class cannot be anonymous.

    (I've just read sepp2k's answer and I'm thinking his is better. I'll leave this here anyway.)

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  • 2020-12-04 11:15

    How aboutthe following code:

    dynamic_name = "TestEval2"
    class_string = """
    class #{dynamic_name}
      def method1
      end
    end
    """
    eval(class_string)
    dummy2 = Object.const_get(dynamic_name)
    puts "dummy2: #{dummy2}"
    

    Eval doesn' retun the runtime Class object, at least on my PC it doesn't. Use Object.const_get to get the Class object.

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  • 2020-12-04 11:20

    I know this is a really old question, and some other Rubyists might shun me from the community for this, but I am working on creating a very thin wrapper gem that wraps a popular java project with ruby classes. Based on @sepp2k's answer, I created a couple helper methods because I had to do this many, many times in one project. Note that I namespaced these methods so that they were not polluting some top-level namespace like Object or Kernel.

    module Redbeam
      # helper method to create thin class wrappers easily within the given namespace
      # 
      # @param  parent_klass [Class] parent class of the klasses
      # @param  klasses [Array[String, Class]] 2D array of [class, superclass]
      #   where each class is a String name of the class to create and superclass
      #   is the class the new class will inherit from
      def self.create_klasses(parent_klass, klasses)
        parent_klass.instance_eval do
          klasses.each do |klass, superklass|
            parent_klass.const_set klass, Class.new(superklass)
          end
        end
      end
    
      # helper method to create thin module wrappers easily within the given namespace
      # 
      # @param parent_klass [Class] parent class of the modules
      # @param modules [Array[String, Module]] 2D array of [module, supermodule]
      #   where each module is a String name of the module to create and supermodule
      #   is the module the new module will extend
      def self.create_modules(parent_klass, modules)
        parent_klass.instance_eval do
          modules.each do |new_module, supermodule|
            parent_klass.const_set new_module, Module.new { extend supermodule }
          end
        end
      end
    end
    

    To use these methods (note that this is JRuby):

    module Redbeam::Options
      Redbeam.create_klasses(self, [
        ['PipelineOptionsFactory', org.apache.beam.sdk.options.PipelineOptionsFactory]
      ])
      Redbeam.create_modules(self, [
        ['PipelineOptions', org.apache.beam.sdk.options.PipelineOptions]
      ])
    end
    

    WHY??

    This allows me to create a JRuby gem that uses the Java project and would allow the open source community and I to decorate these classes in the future, as necessary. It also creates a more friendly namespace to use the classes in. Since my gem is a very, very thin wrapper, I had to create many, many subclasses and modules to extend other modules.

    As we say at J.D. Power, "this is apology-driven development: I'm sorry".

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  • 2020-12-04 11:29

    The name of a class is simply the name of the first constant that refers to it.

    I.e. if I do myclass = Class.new and then MyClass = myclass, the name of the class will become MyClass. However I can't do MyClass = if I don't know the name of the class until runtime.

    So instead you can use Module#const_set, which dynamically sets the value of a const. Example:

    dynamic_name = "ClassName"
    Object.const_set(dynamic_name, Class.new { def method1() 42 end })
    ClassName.new.method1 #=> 42
    
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