KEMBAR78
Ruby For Java Programmers | PPT
Ruby for Java Programmers Mike Bowler President, Gargoyle Software Inc.
Why learn another language?
Why Ruby?
Timeline: 1993 to 2000 Created in 1993 by Yukihiro "Matz" Matsumoto Ruby was popular in Japan but unknown everywhere else All documentation was written in Japanese
Timeline: 2000-2004 First English language book published in 2000  A lot of interest in the Agile development community but mostly unknown elsewhere
Timeline: 2004-today The Ruby on Rails framework has pushed ruby into the spotlight This is the “killer app”
What influenced it?
Terminology Early Late Static Dynamic Strong Weak
Defining strong/weak typing Strong typing Objects are of a specific type and will not be converted automatically Java: “4”/2 results in a compile error Weak typing Objects can be converted under the covers at any time Perl: ‘4’/2 => 2 Ruby is strongly typed
Early/late binding Early binding (aka static binding) All method invocations must be defined at compile time Java: foo.getUser() Late binding (aka dynamic binding) The runtime does not check that a given method exists until an attempt to invoke it Smalltalk: foo user. Ruby uses late binding
Similarities Like Java, Ruby... runs on a virtual machine is garbage collected is object oriented (although to different degrees)
Differences Everything is an object Java string = String.valueOf(1); Ruby string = 1.to_s() Primitive Object
Differences Many things that you would expect to be keywords are actually methods throw  new IllegalArgumentException( "oops" ); raise  TypeError.new( "oops" ) Keywords Methods
Differences Some syntax optional unless the result is ambiguous These statements are equivalent puts( "foo" ); puts  "foo" Idiomatic (better) style
Differences Classes are real objects They’re instances of Class Class methods can be overridden
class  ZebraCage < Cage attr_accessor  :capacity @@allCages  = Array. new def  initialize maximumZebraCount @capacity  = maximumZebraCount @@allCages  << self end private def  clean_cage # do some stuff here end end cage = ZebraCage. new   10 puts cage.capacity
Multiline if if  name. nil ? do_something end
Multiline if if  name. nil ? do_something end Notice the question mark
With an else if  name. nil ? do_something else something_else end
Single line if if  name. nil ? do_something end do_something  if  name. nil ?
Both kinds of unless if  name. nil ? do_something end do_something  if  name. nil ? unless  name. nil ? do_something end do_something  unless  name. nil ?
Dangerous methods name =  &quot;   foo   &quot; name.strip name.strip! Returns a new string. Doesn’t modify name. Modifies name  and returns that. Dangerous!
Philosophy Java focuses on building blocks You can build whatever you want with the pieces Ruby focuses on solving problems Things you do frequently should be concise
Initializing arrays List<String> list =  new  ArrayList<String>(); list.add( &quot;foo&quot; ); list.add( &quot;bar&quot; );
Same only ruby List<String> list =  new  ArrayList<String>(); list.add( &quot;foo&quot; ); list.add( &quot;bar&quot; ); list = Array.new list <<  'foo' list <<  'bar'
[] List<String> list =  new  ArrayList<String>(); list.add( &quot;foo&quot; ); list.add( &quot;bar&quot; ); list = Array.new list <<  'foo' list <<  'bar' list = [ 'foo' ,  'bar' ]
%w() List<String> list =  new  ArrayList<String>(); list.add( &quot;foo&quot; ); list.add( &quot;bar&quot; ); list = Array.new list <<  'foo' list <<  'bar' list = [ 'foo' ,  'bar' ] list =  %w(foo   bar)
In fairness to java... List<String> list =  new  ArrayList<String>(); list.add( &quot;foo&quot; ); list.add( &quot;bar&quot; ); List<String> list = Arrays.asList( &quot;foo&quot; ,  &quot;bar&quot; ); list = Array.new list <<  'foo' list <<  'bar' list = [ 'foo' ,  'bar' ] list =  %w(foo   bar)
Same idea with hashes Map<String,String> map    = new HashMap<String,String>(); map.put( &quot;foo&quot; ,  &quot;one&quot; ); map.put( &quot;bar&quot; ,  &quot;two&quot; ); map = { 'foo'  =>  'one' ,  'bar'  =>  'two' }
Special case for Hash hash = { :a  =>  5 ,  :b  =>  3 } do_stuff  30 , hash do_stuff  100 ,  :a  =>  5 ,  :b  =>  3
Regular Expressions Pattern pattern = Pattern.compile( &quot;^\\s*(.+)\\s*$&quot; ); Matcher matcher =  pattern .matcher(line); if ( matcher.matches() ) { doSomething(); }
Regular Expressions Pattern pattern = Pattern.compile( &quot;^\\s*(.+)\\s*$&quot; ); Matcher matcher =  pattern .matcher(line); if ( matcher.matches() ) { doSomething(); } do_something  if  line =~  /^\s*(.+)\s*$/
Nil and Null Java’s null Ruby’s nil Absence of an object An instance of NilClass if( a != null ) {...} unless a.nil? {...} null.toString() -> NPE nil.to_s -> “” null.getUser() -> Exception in thread &quot;main&quot; java.lang.NullPointerException nil.get_user ->  NoMethodError: undefined method ‘get_user’ for nil:NilClass
Implications of late binding Method dispatch is quite different Ruby makes a distinction between “messages” that are sent to an object and the “methods” that get dispatched
Message != Method
What if there isn’t a method for the specified message?
method_missing example from ActiveRecord user = Users.find_by_name(name) user = Users.find( :first ,  :conditions  => [  &quot;name = ?&quot; , name])
Creating proxy objects Mock object for testing Proxy object to allow distributed objects across machines Wrapper to record usage of a given object
Implementing a proxy class  Proxy def  method_missing name, *args, &proc puts name,args end end
Implementing a proxy class  Proxy def  method_missing name, *args, &proc puts name,args end end Proxy. new .foo_bar ‘a’ Proxy. new .to_s Dispatches to  method_missing Doesn’t go to  method_missing
Overriding to_s class  Proxy def  method_missing name, *args, &proc puts name,args end def  to_s method_missing :to_s, [] end end
= • === • =~ • __id__ • _send__ • class • clone • dclone display • dup • enum_for • eql? • equal? • extend   freeze frozen? • hash • id • inspect • instance_eval instance_of? instance_variable_defined • instance_variable_get instance_variable_get • instance_variable_set   instance_variable_set • instance_variables • is_a? kind_of? • method • methods • new • nil? • object_id  p rivate_methods • protected_methods • public_methods remove_instance_variable • respond_to? • send singleton_method_added • singleton_method_removed singleton_method_undefined • singleton_methods • taint tainted? • to_a • to_enum • to_s • to_yaml to_yaml_properties • to_yaml_style • type • untaint
Implementing a proxy class  Proxy instance_methods.each do |method| undef_method method unless method =~ /^__/ end def  method_missing name, *args, &proc puts name,args end end Proxy. new .to_s
Unix was not designed to stop people from doing stupid things, because that would also stop them from doing clever things. — Doug Gwyn
Cultural differences about type Java is very focused on the types of objects Is the object an instance of a specific class? Or does it implement a specific interface? Ruby is focused on the behaviour Does the object respond to a given message?
Types public   void  foo( ArrayList list ) { list.add( &quot;foo&quot; ); } def  foo list list <<  'foo' end What’s the type? What’s the type?
Duck typing def  foo list list <<  'foo' end If list is a String => ‘foo’ If list is an Array => [‘foo’] If list is an IO => string will be written to stream
Duck typing Duck typing implies that an object is interchangeable with any other object that implements the same interface, regardless of whether the objects have a related inheritance hierarchy. -- Wikipedia &quot;If it walks like a duck and quacks like a duck, it must be a duck.&quot; -- Pragmatic Dave Thomas
How does this  change how we think of types? think of types? think of types?
Overflow conditions int  a = Integer. MAX_VALUE ; System. out .println( &quot;  a=&quot; +a); System. out .println( &quot;a+1=&quot; +(a+1)); a=2147483647 a+1= ??
Overflow conditions int  a = Integer. MAX_VALUE ; System. out .println( &quot;  a=&quot; +a); System. out .println( &quot;a+1=&quot; +(a+1)); a=2147483647 a+1=-2147483648 oops
Overflow in ruby? number =  1000 1 .upto( 4 )  do puts  &quot;#{number.class} #{number}&quot; number = number * number end Fixnum 1000 Fixnum 1000000 Bignum 1000000000000 Bignum 1000000000000000000000000
Closures A closure is a function that is evaluated in an environment containing one or more bound variables. When called, the function can access these variables. The explicit use of closures is associated with functional programming and with languages such as ML and Lisp. Constructs such as objects in other languages can also be modeled with closures.   -- Wikipedia
Closures A closure is a block of code that you can manipulate and query In Ruby we call them blocks or Procs A block is a pure closure A Proc is a block wrapped as an object We generally use the terms block and Proc interchangeably
Closures multiplier = 5 block =  lambda  {|number| puts number * multiplier } A block An instance of Proc lambda() is a  method to convert blocks into Procs
Closures multiplier = 5 block =  lambda  {|number| puts number * multiplier } Parameter to the block
Closures multiplier = 5 block =  lambda  {|number| puts number * multiplier } Able to access variables  from outside the block
Proc’s multiplier = 5 block =  lambda  {|number| puts number * multiplier } block.call 2 block.arity prints 10 returns number of parameters that the block takes.  1 in this case
Blocks as parameters multiplier = 5 1.upto(3) {|number| puts number * multiplier } => 5 => 10 => 15 Same block as before Called once for each time through the loop
Alternate syntax multiplier = 5 1.upto(3) {|number| puts number * multiplier } 1.upto(3) do |number| puts number * multiplier end Equivalent
Why are closures significant? Presence of closures in a language completely changes the design of the libraries Closure based libraries generally result in significantly less code
// Read the lines and split them into columns List<String[]> lines=  new  ArrayList<String[]>(); BufferedReader reader =  null ; try  { reader =  new  BufferedReader( new  FileReader( &quot;people.txt&quot; )); String line = reader.readLine(); while ( line !=  null  ) { lines.add( line.split( &quot;\t&quot; ) ); } } finally  { if ( reader !=  null  ) { reader.close(); } } // then sort Collections.sort(lines,  new  Comparator<String[]>() { public   int  compare(String[] one, String[] two) { return  one[1].compareTo(two[1]); } }); // then write them back out BufferedWriter writer =  null ; try  { writer =  new  BufferedWriter(  new  FileWriter( &quot;people.txt&quot; ) ); for ( String[] strings : lines ) { StringBuilder builder =  new  StringBuilder(); for (  int  i=0; i<strings. length ; i++ ) { if ( i != 0 ) { builder.append( &quot;\t&quot; ); } builder.append(strings[i]); } } } finally  { if ( writer !=  null  ) { writer.close(); } } # Load the data lines = Array. new IO.foreach( 'people.txt' )  do  |line| lines << line.split end # Sort and write it back out File.open( 'people.txt' ,  'w' )  do  |file| lines.sort {|a,b| a[ 1 ] <=> b[ 1 ]}. each   do  |array| puts array.join( &quot;\t&quot; ) end end
Closure File Example file = File. new (fileName, 'w' ) begin file.puts ‘some content’ rescue file.close end
Closure File Example file = File. new (fileName, 'w' ) begin file.puts ‘some content’ rescue file.close end Only one line of business logic
Closure File Example file = File. new (fileName, 'w' ) begin file.puts ‘some content’ rescue file.close end File.open(fileName, 'w' )  do  |file| file.puts ‘some content’ end
Ruby file IO sample # Load the data lines = Array. new IO.foreach( 'people.txt' )  do  |line| lines << line.split end # Sort and write it back out File.open( 'people.txt' ,  'w' )  do  |file| lines.sort {|a,b| a[ 1 ] <=> b[ 1 ]}. each   do  |array| puts array.join( &quot;\t&quot; ) end end
Closure-like things in Java final  String name = getName(); new  Thread(  new  Runnable() { public   void  run() { doSomething(name); } }).start(); Only one line of business logic
Closures for Java? There are a couple of proposals being debated for Java7 Unclear whether any of them will be accepted In the past, Sun’s position has been that closures didn’t make sense at this point in Java’s evolution public static void main(String[] args) { int plus2(int x) { return x+2; } int(int) plus2b = plus2; System.out.println(plus2b(2)); }
Inheriting behaviour from multiple places C++ has multiple inheritance Java has interfaces Ruby has mixins
C++ : multiple inheritance
Java : inheritance
Ruby : mixins
Mixins Cannot be instantiated Can be mixed in
Enumerable class  Foo include  Enumerable def  each &block block.call 1 block.call 2 block.call 3 end end module  Enumerable def  collect array = [] each do |a| array <<  yield (a) end array end end
Enumerable class  Foo include  Enumerable def  each &block block.call 1 block.call 2 block.call 3 end end module  Enumerable def  collect array = [] each do |a| array <<  yield (a) end array end end
Enumerable Requires that the class implement each() For max, min and sort the <=> operator is also needed Adds many methods for modifying, searching, sorting the items all?, any?, collect, detect, each_cons, each_slice, each_with_index, entries, enum_cons, enum_slice, enum_with_index, find, find_all, grep, include?, inject, map, max, member?, min, partition, reject, select, sort, sort_by, to_a, to_set, zip
Reopening classes class  Foo def  one puts  'one' end end
Reopening classes class  Foo def  one puts  'one' end end class  Foo def  two puts  'two' end end Reopening  the same class
Reopening classes class  Foo def  one puts  'one' end end class  Foo def  one puts  '1' end end Replacing, not adding a method
Reopening core classes class  String def  one puts  'one' end end We reopened  a CORE class and modified it
Metaprogramming Metaprogramming is the writing of computer programs that write or manipulate other programs (or themselves) as their data. In many cases, this allows programmers to get more done in the same amount of time as they would take to write all the code manually. -- Wikipedia
What changes can we make at runtime? Anything we can hand code, we can programmatically do Because of late binding, EVERYTHING happens at runtime
attr_accessor class  Foo attr_accessor  :bar end class  Foo def  bar @bar end def  bar=(newBar) @bar  = newBar end end Getter Setter
Possible implementation of attr_accessor class  Foo def  self.attr_accessor name module_eval <<-DONE def  #{name}() @ #{name} end def  #{name}=(newValue) @ #{name} = newValue end DONE end my_attr_accessor  :bar end
Possible implementation of attr_accessor class  Foo def  self.attr_accessor name module_eval <<-DONE def  #{name}() @ #{name} end def  #{name}=(newValue) @ #{name} = newValue end DONE end my_attr_accessor  :bar end “ Here Doc” Evaluates to  String
Possible implementation of attr_accessor class  Foo def  self.attr_accessor name module_eval <<-DONE def  #{name}() @ #{name} end def  #{name}=(newValue) @ #{name} = newValue end DONE end my_attr_accessor  :bar end String substitution
Possible implementation of attr_accessor class  Foo def  self.attr_accessor name module_eval <<-DONE def  #{name}() @ #{name} end def  #{name}=(newValue) @ #{name} = newValue end DONE end my_attr_accessor  :bar end Executes the string in the context of the class
Result class  Foo def  bar @bar end def  bar=(newBar) @bar  = newBar end end
ActiveRecord class  ListItem < ActiveRecord::Base belongs_to  :amazon_item acts_as_taggable acts_as_list  :scope  =>  :user end
Date :: once def  once(*ids)  # :nodoc: for  id  in  ids module_eval <<-&quot; end ;&quot;, __FILE__, __LINE__ alias_method  :__ #{id.to_i}__, :#{id.to_s} private  :__ #{id.to_i}__ def   #{id.to_s}(*args, &block) if  defined?  @__ #{id.to_i}__ @__ #{id.to_i}__ elsif  ! self.frozen? @__ #{id.to_i}__ ||= __#{id.to_i}__(*args, &block) else __ #{id.to_i}__(*args, &block) end end end ; end end
ObjectSpace ObjectSpace.each_object do |o|  puts o  end ObjectSpace.each_object(String) do |o|  puts o  end
ObjectSpace ObjectSpace.each_object do |o|  puts o  end ObjectSpace.each_object(String) do |o|  puts o  end All objects Only Strings
Continuations A snapshot of the call stack that the application can revert to at some point in the future
Why continuations? To save the state of the application across reboots of the VM To save the state of the application across requests to a web server Seaside (smalltalk) does this today
Downsides Only supported in one implementation of Ruby Will be removed from the language in Ruby 2.0
Implementations Ruby 1.8.x - “reference implementation” in C Ruby 1.9 - Next version of C interpreter Rubinius - Ruby in Ruby (sort-of) Cardinal - Ruby on Parrot Iron Ruby - Ruby on the DLR (Microsoft) Ruby.NET - Ruby on the CLR JRuby - Ruby on the JVM (Sun)
Implementations Ruby 1.8.x - “reference implementation” in C Ruby 1.9 - Next version of C interpreter Rubinius - Ruby in Ruby (sort-of) Cardinal - Ruby on Parrot Iron Ruby - Ruby on the DLR (Microsoft) Ruby.NET - Ruby on the CLR JRuby - Ruby on the JVM (Sun)
JRuby Runs on the Java Virtual Machine (JVM) Full implementation of the Ruby language Supported by Sun Runs many benchmarks faster than the 1.8 reference implementation (written in C) Able to easily call out to Java code
Ruby on Rails Web application framework Sweet spot - web application talking to a single relational database Allows very rapid development of web apps
Who’s using rails? Amazon • BBC • Cap Gemini  Chicago Tribune • Barclays • BPN • Cisco CNET  Electronic Arts • IBM • John Deere   JP Morgan Chase • LA Times • Limewire  Linked In • NASA • NBC • New York Times Oakley • Oracle • Orbitz • Turner Media twitter.com • Siemens • ThoughtWorks  Yahoo!
JRuby on Rails? Yes!  You can run a rails application on JRuby in a servlet container Goldspike is the servlet that dispatches to rails Tested on WebLogic, WebSphere, GlassFish, Jetty, Tomcat Warbler is the packaging tool that makes the WAR Supported on:  WebLogic, WebSphere, GlassFish, Jetty, Tomcat
Recap Learning a new language will make you better with all the languages you know Ruby has a much more concise syntax which means that it takes much less code to solve the same problems Ruby is able to run on the JVM which makes it an option for shops with heavy investments in J2EE infrastructure
Recap Everything is an object The language is extremely malleable New classes/methods can be created on the fly Existing classes can be modified at any time
Contacting me Mike Bowler [email_address] www.GargoyleSoftware.com  (co mpany) www.SphericalImpr ovement.com  (blog) Interested in le arning more about how Ruby a nd Java can coexist in your company?  Just ask me.

Ruby For Java Programmers

  • 1.
    Ruby for JavaProgrammers Mike Bowler President, Gargoyle Software Inc.
  • 2.
  • 3.
  • 4.
    Timeline: 1993 to2000 Created in 1993 by Yukihiro &quot;Matz&quot; Matsumoto Ruby was popular in Japan but unknown everywhere else All documentation was written in Japanese
  • 5.
    Timeline: 2000-2004 FirstEnglish language book published in 2000 A lot of interest in the Agile development community but mostly unknown elsewhere
  • 6.
    Timeline: 2004-today TheRuby on Rails framework has pushed ruby into the spotlight This is the “killer app”
  • 7.
  • 8.
    Terminology Early LateStatic Dynamic Strong Weak
  • 9.
    Defining strong/weak typingStrong typing Objects are of a specific type and will not be converted automatically Java: “4”/2 results in a compile error Weak typing Objects can be converted under the covers at any time Perl: ‘4’/2 => 2 Ruby is strongly typed
  • 10.
    Early/late binding Earlybinding (aka static binding) All method invocations must be defined at compile time Java: foo.getUser() Late binding (aka dynamic binding) The runtime does not check that a given method exists until an attempt to invoke it Smalltalk: foo user. Ruby uses late binding
  • 11.
    Similarities Like Java,Ruby... runs on a virtual machine is garbage collected is object oriented (although to different degrees)
  • 12.
    Differences Everything isan object Java string = String.valueOf(1); Ruby string = 1.to_s() Primitive Object
  • 13.
    Differences Many thingsthat you would expect to be keywords are actually methods throw new IllegalArgumentException( &quot;oops&quot; ); raise TypeError.new( &quot;oops&quot; ) Keywords Methods
  • 14.
    Differences Some syntaxoptional unless the result is ambiguous These statements are equivalent puts( &quot;foo&quot; ); puts &quot;foo&quot; Idiomatic (better) style
  • 15.
    Differences Classes arereal objects They’re instances of Class Class methods can be overridden
  • 16.
    class ZebraCage< Cage attr_accessor :capacity @@allCages = Array. new def initialize maximumZebraCount @capacity = maximumZebraCount @@allCages << self end private def clean_cage # do some stuff here end end cage = ZebraCage. new 10 puts cage.capacity
  • 17.
    Multiline if if name. nil ? do_something end
  • 18.
    Multiline if if name. nil ? do_something end Notice the question mark
  • 19.
    With an elseif name. nil ? do_something else something_else end
  • 20.
    Single line ifif name. nil ? do_something end do_something if name. nil ?
  • 21.
    Both kinds ofunless if name. nil ? do_something end do_something if name. nil ? unless name. nil ? do_something end do_something unless name. nil ?
  • 22.
    Dangerous methods name= &quot; foo &quot; name.strip name.strip! Returns a new string. Doesn’t modify name. Modifies name and returns that. Dangerous!
  • 23.
    Philosophy Java focuseson building blocks You can build whatever you want with the pieces Ruby focuses on solving problems Things you do frequently should be concise
  • 24.
    Initializing arrays List<String>list = new ArrayList<String>(); list.add( &quot;foo&quot; ); list.add( &quot;bar&quot; );
  • 25.
    Same only rubyList<String> list = new ArrayList<String>(); list.add( &quot;foo&quot; ); list.add( &quot;bar&quot; ); list = Array.new list << 'foo' list << 'bar'
  • 26.
    [] List<String> list= new ArrayList<String>(); list.add( &quot;foo&quot; ); list.add( &quot;bar&quot; ); list = Array.new list << 'foo' list << 'bar' list = [ 'foo' , 'bar' ]
  • 27.
    %w() List<String> list= new ArrayList<String>(); list.add( &quot;foo&quot; ); list.add( &quot;bar&quot; ); list = Array.new list << 'foo' list << 'bar' list = [ 'foo' , 'bar' ] list = %w(foo bar)
  • 28.
    In fairness tojava... List<String> list = new ArrayList<String>(); list.add( &quot;foo&quot; ); list.add( &quot;bar&quot; ); List<String> list = Arrays.asList( &quot;foo&quot; , &quot;bar&quot; ); list = Array.new list << 'foo' list << 'bar' list = [ 'foo' , 'bar' ] list = %w(foo bar)
  • 29.
    Same idea withhashes Map<String,String> map = new HashMap<String,String>(); map.put( &quot;foo&quot; , &quot;one&quot; ); map.put( &quot;bar&quot; , &quot;two&quot; ); map = { 'foo' => 'one' , 'bar' => 'two' }
  • 30.
    Special case forHash hash = { :a => 5 , :b => 3 } do_stuff 30 , hash do_stuff 100 , :a => 5 , :b => 3
  • 31.
    Regular Expressions Patternpattern = Pattern.compile( &quot;^\\s*(.+)\\s*$&quot; ); Matcher matcher = pattern .matcher(line); if ( matcher.matches() ) { doSomething(); }
  • 32.
    Regular Expressions Patternpattern = Pattern.compile( &quot;^\\s*(.+)\\s*$&quot; ); Matcher matcher = pattern .matcher(line); if ( matcher.matches() ) { doSomething(); } do_something if line =~ /^\s*(.+)\s*$/
  • 33.
    Nil and NullJava’s null Ruby’s nil Absence of an object An instance of NilClass if( a != null ) {...} unless a.nil? {...} null.toString() -> NPE nil.to_s -> “” null.getUser() -> Exception in thread &quot;main&quot; java.lang.NullPointerException nil.get_user -> NoMethodError: undefined method ‘get_user’ for nil:NilClass
  • 34.
    Implications of latebinding Method dispatch is quite different Ruby makes a distinction between “messages” that are sent to an object and the “methods” that get dispatched
  • 35.
  • 36.
    What if thereisn’t a method for the specified message?
  • 37.
    method_missing example fromActiveRecord user = Users.find_by_name(name) user = Users.find( :first , :conditions => [ &quot;name = ?&quot; , name])
  • 38.
    Creating proxy objectsMock object for testing Proxy object to allow distributed objects across machines Wrapper to record usage of a given object
  • 39.
    Implementing a proxyclass Proxy def method_missing name, *args, &proc puts name,args end end
  • 40.
    Implementing a proxyclass Proxy def method_missing name, *args, &proc puts name,args end end Proxy. new .foo_bar ‘a’ Proxy. new .to_s Dispatches to method_missing Doesn’t go to method_missing
  • 41.
    Overriding to_s class Proxy def method_missing name, *args, &proc puts name,args end def to_s method_missing :to_s, [] end end
  • 42.
    = • ===• =~ • __id__ • _send__ • class • clone • dclone display • dup • enum_for • eql? • equal? • extend freeze frozen? • hash • id • inspect • instance_eval instance_of? instance_variable_defined • instance_variable_get instance_variable_get • instance_variable_set instance_variable_set • instance_variables • is_a? kind_of? • method • methods • new • nil? • object_id p rivate_methods • protected_methods • public_methods remove_instance_variable • respond_to? • send singleton_method_added • singleton_method_removed singleton_method_undefined • singleton_methods • taint tainted? • to_a • to_enum • to_s • to_yaml to_yaml_properties • to_yaml_style • type • untaint
  • 43.
    Implementing a proxyclass Proxy instance_methods.each do |method| undef_method method unless method =~ /^__/ end def method_missing name, *args, &proc puts name,args end end Proxy. new .to_s
  • 44.
    Unix was notdesigned to stop people from doing stupid things, because that would also stop them from doing clever things. — Doug Gwyn
  • 45.
    Cultural differences abouttype Java is very focused on the types of objects Is the object an instance of a specific class? Or does it implement a specific interface? Ruby is focused on the behaviour Does the object respond to a given message?
  • 46.
    Types public void foo( ArrayList list ) { list.add( &quot;foo&quot; ); } def foo list list << 'foo' end What’s the type? What’s the type?
  • 47.
    Duck typing def foo list list << 'foo' end If list is a String => ‘foo’ If list is an Array => [‘foo’] If list is an IO => string will be written to stream
  • 48.
    Duck typing Ducktyping implies that an object is interchangeable with any other object that implements the same interface, regardless of whether the objects have a related inheritance hierarchy. -- Wikipedia &quot;If it walks like a duck and quacks like a duck, it must be a duck.&quot; -- Pragmatic Dave Thomas
  • 49.
    How does this change how we think of types? think of types? think of types?
  • 50.
    Overflow conditions int a = Integer. MAX_VALUE ; System. out .println( &quot; a=&quot; +a); System. out .println( &quot;a+1=&quot; +(a+1)); a=2147483647 a+1= ??
  • 51.
    Overflow conditions int a = Integer. MAX_VALUE ; System. out .println( &quot; a=&quot; +a); System. out .println( &quot;a+1=&quot; +(a+1)); a=2147483647 a+1=-2147483648 oops
  • 52.
    Overflow in ruby?number = 1000 1 .upto( 4 ) do puts &quot;#{number.class} #{number}&quot; number = number * number end Fixnum 1000 Fixnum 1000000 Bignum 1000000000000 Bignum 1000000000000000000000000
  • 53.
    Closures A closureis a function that is evaluated in an environment containing one or more bound variables. When called, the function can access these variables. The explicit use of closures is associated with functional programming and with languages such as ML and Lisp. Constructs such as objects in other languages can also be modeled with closures. -- Wikipedia
  • 54.
    Closures A closureis a block of code that you can manipulate and query In Ruby we call them blocks or Procs A block is a pure closure A Proc is a block wrapped as an object We generally use the terms block and Proc interchangeably
  • 55.
    Closures multiplier =5 block = lambda {|number| puts number * multiplier } A block An instance of Proc lambda() is a method to convert blocks into Procs
  • 56.
    Closures multiplier =5 block = lambda {|number| puts number * multiplier } Parameter to the block
  • 57.
    Closures multiplier =5 block = lambda {|number| puts number * multiplier } Able to access variables from outside the block
  • 58.
    Proc’s multiplier =5 block = lambda {|number| puts number * multiplier } block.call 2 block.arity prints 10 returns number of parameters that the block takes. 1 in this case
  • 59.
    Blocks as parametersmultiplier = 5 1.upto(3) {|number| puts number * multiplier } => 5 => 10 => 15 Same block as before Called once for each time through the loop
  • 60.
    Alternate syntax multiplier= 5 1.upto(3) {|number| puts number * multiplier } 1.upto(3) do |number| puts number * multiplier end Equivalent
  • 61.
    Why are closuressignificant? Presence of closures in a language completely changes the design of the libraries Closure based libraries generally result in significantly less code
  • 62.
    // Read thelines and split them into columns List<String[]> lines= new ArrayList<String[]>(); BufferedReader reader = null ; try { reader = new BufferedReader( new FileReader( &quot;people.txt&quot; )); String line = reader.readLine(); while ( line != null ) { lines.add( line.split( &quot;\t&quot; ) ); } } finally { if ( reader != null ) { reader.close(); } } // then sort Collections.sort(lines, new Comparator<String[]>() { public int compare(String[] one, String[] two) { return one[1].compareTo(two[1]); } }); // then write them back out BufferedWriter writer = null ; try { writer = new BufferedWriter( new FileWriter( &quot;people.txt&quot; ) ); for ( String[] strings : lines ) { StringBuilder builder = new StringBuilder(); for ( int i=0; i<strings. length ; i++ ) { if ( i != 0 ) { builder.append( &quot;\t&quot; ); } builder.append(strings[i]); } } } finally { if ( writer != null ) { writer.close(); } } # Load the data lines = Array. new IO.foreach( 'people.txt' ) do |line| lines << line.split end # Sort and write it back out File.open( 'people.txt' , 'w' ) do |file| lines.sort {|a,b| a[ 1 ] <=> b[ 1 ]}. each do |array| puts array.join( &quot;\t&quot; ) end end
  • 63.
    Closure File Examplefile = File. new (fileName, 'w' ) begin file.puts ‘some content’ rescue file.close end
  • 64.
    Closure File Examplefile = File. new (fileName, 'w' ) begin file.puts ‘some content’ rescue file.close end Only one line of business logic
  • 65.
    Closure File Examplefile = File. new (fileName, 'w' ) begin file.puts ‘some content’ rescue file.close end File.open(fileName, 'w' ) do |file| file.puts ‘some content’ end
  • 66.
    Ruby file IOsample # Load the data lines = Array. new IO.foreach( 'people.txt' ) do |line| lines << line.split end # Sort and write it back out File.open( 'people.txt' , 'w' ) do |file| lines.sort {|a,b| a[ 1 ] <=> b[ 1 ]}. each do |array| puts array.join( &quot;\t&quot; ) end end
  • 67.
    Closure-like things inJava final String name = getName(); new Thread( new Runnable() { public void run() { doSomething(name); } }).start(); Only one line of business logic
  • 68.
    Closures for Java?There are a couple of proposals being debated for Java7 Unclear whether any of them will be accepted In the past, Sun’s position has been that closures didn’t make sense at this point in Java’s evolution public static void main(String[] args) { int plus2(int x) { return x+2; } int(int) plus2b = plus2; System.out.println(plus2b(2)); }
  • 69.
    Inheriting behaviour frommultiple places C++ has multiple inheritance Java has interfaces Ruby has mixins
  • 70.
    C++ : multipleinheritance
  • 71.
  • 72.
  • 73.
    Mixins Cannot beinstantiated Can be mixed in
  • 74.
    Enumerable class Foo include Enumerable def each &block block.call 1 block.call 2 block.call 3 end end module Enumerable def collect array = [] each do |a| array << yield (a) end array end end
  • 75.
    Enumerable class Foo include Enumerable def each &block block.call 1 block.call 2 block.call 3 end end module Enumerable def collect array = [] each do |a| array << yield (a) end array end end
  • 76.
    Enumerable Requires thatthe class implement each() For max, min and sort the <=> operator is also needed Adds many methods for modifying, searching, sorting the items all?, any?, collect, detect, each_cons, each_slice, each_with_index, entries, enum_cons, enum_slice, enum_with_index, find, find_all, grep, include?, inject, map, max, member?, min, partition, reject, select, sort, sort_by, to_a, to_set, zip
  • 77.
    Reopening classes class Foo def one puts 'one' end end
  • 78.
    Reopening classes class Foo def one puts 'one' end end class Foo def two puts 'two' end end Reopening the same class
  • 79.
    Reopening classes class Foo def one puts 'one' end end class Foo def one puts '1' end end Replacing, not adding a method
  • 80.
    Reopening core classesclass String def one puts 'one' end end We reopened a CORE class and modified it
  • 81.
    Metaprogramming Metaprogramming isthe writing of computer programs that write or manipulate other programs (or themselves) as their data. In many cases, this allows programmers to get more done in the same amount of time as they would take to write all the code manually. -- Wikipedia
  • 82.
    What changes canwe make at runtime? Anything we can hand code, we can programmatically do Because of late binding, EVERYTHING happens at runtime
  • 83.
    attr_accessor class Foo attr_accessor :bar end class Foo def bar @bar end def bar=(newBar) @bar = newBar end end Getter Setter
  • 84.
    Possible implementation ofattr_accessor class Foo def self.attr_accessor name module_eval <<-DONE def #{name}() @ #{name} end def #{name}=(newValue) @ #{name} = newValue end DONE end my_attr_accessor :bar end
  • 85.
    Possible implementation ofattr_accessor class Foo def self.attr_accessor name module_eval <<-DONE def #{name}() @ #{name} end def #{name}=(newValue) @ #{name} = newValue end DONE end my_attr_accessor :bar end “ Here Doc” Evaluates to String
  • 86.
    Possible implementation ofattr_accessor class Foo def self.attr_accessor name module_eval <<-DONE def #{name}() @ #{name} end def #{name}=(newValue) @ #{name} = newValue end DONE end my_attr_accessor :bar end String substitution
  • 87.
    Possible implementation ofattr_accessor class Foo def self.attr_accessor name module_eval <<-DONE def #{name}() @ #{name} end def #{name}=(newValue) @ #{name} = newValue end DONE end my_attr_accessor :bar end Executes the string in the context of the class
  • 88.
    Result class Foo def bar @bar end def bar=(newBar) @bar = newBar end end
  • 89.
    ActiveRecord class ListItem < ActiveRecord::Base belongs_to :amazon_item acts_as_taggable acts_as_list :scope => :user end
  • 90.
    Date :: oncedef once(*ids) # :nodoc: for id in ids module_eval <<-&quot; end ;&quot;, __FILE__, __LINE__ alias_method :__ #{id.to_i}__, :#{id.to_s} private :__ #{id.to_i}__ def #{id.to_s}(*args, &block) if defined? @__ #{id.to_i}__ @__ #{id.to_i}__ elsif ! self.frozen? @__ #{id.to_i}__ ||= __#{id.to_i}__(*args, &block) else __ #{id.to_i}__(*args, &block) end end end ; end end
  • 91.
    ObjectSpace ObjectSpace.each_object do|o| puts o end ObjectSpace.each_object(String) do |o| puts o end
  • 92.
    ObjectSpace ObjectSpace.each_object do|o| puts o end ObjectSpace.each_object(String) do |o| puts o end All objects Only Strings
  • 93.
    Continuations A snapshotof the call stack that the application can revert to at some point in the future
  • 94.
    Why continuations? Tosave the state of the application across reboots of the VM To save the state of the application across requests to a web server Seaside (smalltalk) does this today
  • 95.
    Downsides Only supportedin one implementation of Ruby Will be removed from the language in Ruby 2.0
  • 96.
    Implementations Ruby 1.8.x- “reference implementation” in C Ruby 1.9 - Next version of C interpreter Rubinius - Ruby in Ruby (sort-of) Cardinal - Ruby on Parrot Iron Ruby - Ruby on the DLR (Microsoft) Ruby.NET - Ruby on the CLR JRuby - Ruby on the JVM (Sun)
  • 97.
    Implementations Ruby 1.8.x- “reference implementation” in C Ruby 1.9 - Next version of C interpreter Rubinius - Ruby in Ruby (sort-of) Cardinal - Ruby on Parrot Iron Ruby - Ruby on the DLR (Microsoft) Ruby.NET - Ruby on the CLR JRuby - Ruby on the JVM (Sun)
  • 98.
    JRuby Runs onthe Java Virtual Machine (JVM) Full implementation of the Ruby language Supported by Sun Runs many benchmarks faster than the 1.8 reference implementation (written in C) Able to easily call out to Java code
  • 99.
    Ruby on RailsWeb application framework Sweet spot - web application talking to a single relational database Allows very rapid development of web apps
  • 100.
    Who’s using rails?Amazon • BBC • Cap Gemini Chicago Tribune • Barclays • BPN • Cisco CNET Electronic Arts • IBM • John Deere JP Morgan Chase • LA Times • Limewire Linked In • NASA • NBC • New York Times Oakley • Oracle • Orbitz • Turner Media twitter.com • Siemens • ThoughtWorks Yahoo!
  • 101.
    JRuby on Rails?Yes! You can run a rails application on JRuby in a servlet container Goldspike is the servlet that dispatches to rails Tested on WebLogic, WebSphere, GlassFish, Jetty, Tomcat Warbler is the packaging tool that makes the WAR Supported on: WebLogic, WebSphere, GlassFish, Jetty, Tomcat
  • 102.
    Recap Learning anew language will make you better with all the languages you know Ruby has a much more concise syntax which means that it takes much less code to solve the same problems Ruby is able to run on the JVM which makes it an option for shops with heavy investments in J2EE infrastructure
  • 103.
    Recap Everything isan object The language is extremely malleable New classes/methods can be created on the fly Existing classes can be modified at any time
  • 104.
    Contacting me MikeBowler [email_address] www.GargoyleSoftware.com (co mpany) www.SphericalImpr ovement.com (blog) Interested in le arning more about how Ruby a nd Java can coexist in your company? Just ask me.