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diy

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== DIY

  • http://atomicobject.github.com/diy

== DESCRIPTION:

DIY (Dependency Injection in YAML) is a simple dependency injection library which focuses on declarative composition of objects through constructor injection.

== INSTALL:

  • gem install diy

== SYNOPSIS:

=== Common Usage

Author a YAML file that describes your objects and how they fit together. This means you're building a Hash whose keys are the object names, and whose values are Hashes that define the object.

The following context defines an automobile engine:

context.yml:

engine: compose: throttle, block throttle: compose: cable, pedal block: cable: pedal:

In your code, use DIY to load the YAML, then access its parts:

context = DIY::Context.from_file('context.yml') context[:engine] => Engine:0x81eb0

This approach assumes:

  • You've got classes for Engine, Throttle, Block, Cable and Pedal
  • They're defined in engine.rb, throttle.rb, etc
  • The library files are in your load-path
  • Engine and Throttle both have a constructor that accepts a Hash. The Hash will contain keys 'throttle', 'block' (for Engine) and 'cable, 'pedal' (for Throttle) and the values will be references to their respective objects.
  • Block, Cable and Pedal all have default constructors that accept no arguments

Sample code for Engine's constructor:

class Engine def initialize(components) @throttle = components['throttle'] @block = components['block'] end end

Writing code like that is repetetive; that's why we created the Constructor gem, which lets you specify object components using the "constructor" class method:

Using constructor, you can write Engine like this:

class Engine constructor :throttle, :block end

=== Special Cases

If your object has a lot of components (or they have big names) you can specify an array of component names as opposed to a comma-separated list:

engine: compose: - throttle - block

Sometimes you won't be able to rely on DIY's basic assumptions about class names and library files.

  • You can specify the 'class' option

  • You can specify the 'library' option. If you do not, the library is inferred from the class name. (Eg, My::Train::Station will be sought in "my/train/station.rb"

    engine: class: FourHorse::Base library: general_engines/base compose: throttle, block

If the Hash coming into your constructor needs to have some keys that do not exactly match the official object names, you can specify them one-by-one:

engine: the_throttle: throttle the_block: block

=== Non-singleton objects

Non-singletons are named objects that provide a new instance every time you ask for them. By default, DIY considers all objects to be singletons. To override, use the "singleton" setting and set it to false:

foo: singleton: false

=== Sub-Contexts

Sub-contexts are useful for creating isolated object networks that may need to be instantiated zero or many times in your application. Objects defined in subcontexts can reference "upward" to their surroundings, as well as objects in the subcontext itself.

If you wanted to be able to make more than one Engine from the preceding examples, you might try:


epa_regulations:

+automotive_plant: engine: compose: block, throttle, epa_regulations block: throttle:

Each time you delve into the automotive_plant, you get a solar system of the defined objects. In this context, the objects are singleton-like. The next time you invoke the subcontext, however, you'll be working with a fresh set of objects... another solar system with the same layout, so to speak.

Subcontexts are not initialized until you call upon them, which you do using the "within" method:

context = DIY::Context.from_file('context.yml') context.within('automotive_plant') do |plant| puts plant[:engine] end

=== Direct Class References

Occasionally you will have a class at your disposal that you'd like to provide directly as components to other objects (as opposed to getting instances of that class, you want to reference the class itself, eg, to use its factory methods). Enter the "use_class_directly" flag:


customer_order_finder: class: CustomerOrder use_class_directly: true

This can be handy in Rails when you'd like to use some of class methods on an ActiveRecord subclass, but you'd like to avoid direct ActiveRecord class usage in your code. In this case, the customer_order_finder is actually the CustomerOrder class, and so, it has methods like "find" and "destroy_all".

=== Namespace Convenience

If you find yourself writing context entries like this:


engine: class: Car::Parts::Engine throttle: class: Car::Parts::Block cable: class: Car::Parts::Cable

You can set the "assumed" module for a group of objects like this:


using_namespace Car Parts: engine:

throttle:

block:

=== Preventing auto-requiring of library files

Normally, DIY will "require" the library for an object just before it instantiates the object. If this is not desired (in Rails, auto-require can lead to library double-load issues), you can deactivate auto-require. There is a global default setting (handled in code) and a per-object override (handled in the context YAML):

DIY::Context.auto_require = false


engine: auto_require: false

=== Factories

It is possible to create factories automatically with DIY:


car_dealer: compose: car_factory

car_factory: builds: car

Then you can use the factory to easily build objects:

context = DIY::Context.from_file('context.yml') context[:car_factory].create => Car:0x81eb0

=== Method Directive

This introduces the concept of first class methods. An object can now be constructed with a method object bound to a particular object in the diy context.


trinket_builder:

method build_trinket: object: trinket_builder method: build

== LICENSE:

(The MIT License)

Copyright (c) 2007 Atomic Object

Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the 'Software'), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:

The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.

THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED 'AS IS', WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.

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Package last updated on 30 Nov 2009

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