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Virtus

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This is a partial extraction of the DataMapper Property API with various modifications and improvements. The goal is to provide a common API for defining attributes on a model so all ORMs/ODMs could use it instead of reinventing the wheel all over again. It is also suitable for any other use case where you need to extend your ruby objects with attributes that require data-type coercions.

Installation

$ gem install virtus

or in your Gemfile

gem 'virtus'

Examples

Using Virtus with Classes

You can create classes extended with Virtus and define attributes:

class User
  include Virtus.model

  attribute :name, String
  attribute :age, Integer
  attribute :birthday, DateTime
end

user = User.new(:name => 'Piotr', :age => 29)
user.attributes # => { :name => "Piotr", :age => 29 }

user.name # => "Piotr"

user.age = '29' # => 29
user.age.class # => Fixnum

user.birthday = 'November 18th, 1983' # => #<DateTime: 1983-11-18T00:00:00+00:00 (4891313/2,0/1,2299161)>

# mass-assignment
user.attributes = { :name => 'Jane', :age => 21 }
user.name # => "Jane"
user.age  # => 21

Cherry-picking extensions

# include attribute DSL + constructor + mass-assignment
class User
  include Virtus.model

  attribute :name, String
end

user = User.new(:name => 'Piotr')
user.attributes = { :name => 'John' }
user.attributes
# => {:name => 'John'}

# include attribute DSL + constructor
class User
  include Virtus.model(:mass_assignment => false)

  attribute :name, String
end

User.new(:name => 'Piotr')

# include just the attribute DSL
class User
  include Virtus.model(:constructor => false, :mass_assignment => false)

  attribute :name, String
end

user = User.new
user.name = 'Piotr'

Using Virtus with Modules

You can create modules extended with Virtus and define attributes for later inclusion in your classes:

module Name
  include Virtus.module

  attribute :name, String
end

module Age
  include Virtus.module(:coerce => false)

  attribute :age, Integer
end

class User
  include Name, Age
end

user = User.new(:name => 'John', :age => 30)

Dynamically Extending Instances

It's also possible to dynamically extend an object with Virtus:

class User
  # nothing here
end

user = User.new
user.extend(Virtus.model)
user.attribute :name, String
user.name = 'John'
user.name # => 'John'

Default Values

class Page
  include Virtus.model

  attribute :title, String

  # default from a singleton value (integer in this case)
  attribute :views, Integer, :default => 0

  # default from a singleton value (boolean in this case)
  attribute :published, Boolean, :default => false

  # default from a callable object (proc in this case)
  attribute :slug, String, :default => lambda { |page, attribute| page.title.downcase.gsub(' ', '-') }

  # default from a method name as symbol
  attribute :editor_title, String,  :default => :default_editor_title

  def default_editor_title
    published? ? title : "UNPUBLISHED: #{title}"
  end
end

page = Page.new(:title => 'Virtus README')
page.slug         # => 'virtus-readme'
page.views        # => 0
page.published    # => false
page.editor_title # => "UNPUBLISHED: Virtus README"

page.views = 10
page.views                    # => 10
page.reset_attribute(:views)  # => 0
page.views                    # => 0

Embedded Value

class City
  include Virtus.model

  attribute :name, String
end

class Address
  include Virtus.model

  attribute :street,  String
  attribute :zipcode, String
  attribute :city,    City
end

class User
  include Virtus.model

  attribute :name,    String
  attribute :address, Address
end

user = User.new(:address => {
  :street => 'Street 1/2', :zipcode => '12345', :city => { :name => 'NYC' } })

user.address.street # => "Street 1/2"
user.address.city.name # => "NYC"

Collection Member Coercions

# Support "primitive" classes
class Book
  include Virtus.model

  attribute :page_numbers, Array[Integer]
end

book = Book.new(:page_numbers => %w[1 2 3])
book.page_numbers # => [1, 2, 3]

# Support EmbeddedValues, too!
class Address
  include Virtus.model

  attribute :address,     String
  attribute :locality,    String
  attribute :region,      String
  attribute :postal_code, String
end

class PhoneNumber
  include Virtus.model

  attribute :number, String
end

class User
  include Virtus.model

  attribute :phone_numbers, Array[PhoneNumber]
  attribute :addresses,     Set[Address]
end

user = User.new(
  :phone_numbers => [
    { :number => '212-555-1212' },
    { :number => '919-444-3265' } ],
  :addresses => [
    { :address => '1234 Any St.', :locality => 'Anytown', :region => "DC", :postal_code => "21234" } ])

user.phone_numbers # => [#<PhoneNumber:0x007fdb2d3bef88 @number="212-555-1212">, #<PhoneNumber:0x007fdb2d3beb00 @number="919-444-3265">]

user.addresses # => #<Set: {#<Address:0x007fdb2d3be448 @address="1234 Any St.", @locality="Anytown", @region="DC", @postal_code="21234">}>

Hash attributes coercion

class Package
  include Virtus.model

  attribute :dimensions, Hash[Symbol => Float]
end

package = Package.new(:dimensions => { 'width' => "2.2", :height => 2, "length" => 4.5 })
package.dimensions # => { :width => 2.2, :height => 2.0, :length => 4.5 }

IMPORTANT note about member coercions

Virtus performs coercions only when a value is being assigned. If you mutate the value later on using its own interfaces then coercion won't be triggered.

Here's an example:

class Book
  include Virtus.model

  attribute :title, String
end

class Library
  include Virtus.model

  attribute :books, Array[Book]
end

library = Library.new

# This will coerce Hash to a Book instance
library.books = [ { :title => 'Introduction to Virtus' } ]

# This WILL NOT COERCE the value because you mutate the books array with Array#<<
library.books << { :title => 'Another Introduction to Virtus' }

A suggested solution to this problem would be to introduce your own class instead of using Array and implement mutation methods that perform coercions. For example:

class Book
  include Virtus.model

  attribute :title, String
end

class BookCollection < Array
  def <<(book)
   if book.kind_of?(Hash)
    super(Book.new(book))
   else
     super
   end
  end
end

class Library
  include Virtus.model

  attribute :books, BookCollection[Book]
end

library = Library.new
library.books << { :title => 'Another Introduction to Virtus' }

Value Objects

class GeoLocation
  include Virtus.value_object

  values do
    attribute :latitude,  Float
    attribute :longitude, Float
  end
end

class Venue
  include Virtus.value_object

  values do
    attribute :name,     String
    attribute :location, GeoLocation
  end
end

venue = Venue.new(
  :name     => 'Pub',
  :location => { :latitude => 37.160317, :longitude => -98.437500 })

venue.location.latitude # => 37.160317
venue.location.longitude # => -98.4375

# Supports object's equality

venue_other = Venue.new(
  :name     => 'Other Pub',
  :location => { :latitude => 37.160317, :longitude => -98.437500 })

venue.location === venue_other.location # => true

Custom Coercions

require 'json'

class Json < Virtus::Attribute
  def coerce(value)
    value.is_a?(::Hash) ? value : JSON.parse(value)
  end
end

class User
  include Virtus.model

  attribute :info, Json
end

user = User.new
user.info = '{"email":"john@domain.com"}' # => {"email"=>"john@domain.com"}
user.info.class # => Hash

# With a custom attribute encapsulating coercion-specific configuration
class NoisyString < Virtus::Attribute
  def coerce(value)
    coercer[value.class].to_string.upcase
  end
end

class User
  include Virtus.model

  attribute :scream, NoisyString
end

user = User.new(:scream => 'hello world!')
user.scream # => "HELLO WORLD!"

Private Attributes

class User
  include Virtus.model

  attribute :unique_id, String, :writer => :private

  def set_unique_id(id)
    self.unique_id = id
  end
end

user = User.new(:unique_id => '1234-1234')
user.unique_id # => nil

user.unique_id = '1234-1234' # => NoMethodError: private method `unique_id='

user.set_unique_id('1234-1234')
user.unique_id # => '1234-1234'

Coercions

Virtus uses Coercible for coercions. This feature is turned on by default. You can turn it off for all attributes like that:

# Turn coercions off globally
Virtus.coerce(false)

# ...or you can turn it off for a single attribute
class User
  include Virtus.model

  attribute :name, String, :coerce => false
end

You can configure coercers too:

Virtus.coercer do |config|
  config.string.boolean_map = { 'yup' => true, 'nope' => false }
end

# Virtus.coercer instance is used by default for all attributes.
# You *can* override it for a single attribute if you want:

my_cool_coercer = Coercible::Coercer.new do |config|
  # some customization
end

class User
  include Virtus.model

  attribute :name, String, :coercer => my_cool_coercer
end

Please check out Coercible README for more information.

Strict Coercion Mode

By default Virtus returns the input value even when it couldn't coerce it to the expected type. If you want to catch such cases in a noisy way you can use the strict mode in which Virtus raises an exception when it failed to coerce an input value.

class User
  include Virtus.model(:strict => true)

  attribute :admin, Boolean
end

# this will raise an error
User.new :admin => "can't really say if true or false"

Building modules with custom configuration

You can also build Virtus modules that contain their own configuration.

YupNopeBooleans = Virtus.model { |mod|
  mod.coerce = true
  mod.string.boolean_map = { 'yup' => true, 'nope' => false }
}

class User
  include YupNopeBooleans

  attribute :name, String
  attribute :admin, Boolean
end

# Or just include the module straight away ...
class User
  include Virtus.model(:coerce => false)

  attribute :name, String
  attribute :admin, Boolean
end

Attribute Finalization and Circular Dependencies

If a type references another type which happens to not be available yet you need to use lazy-finalization of attributes and finalize virtus manually after all types have been already loaded:

# in blog.rb
class Blog
  include Virtus.model(:finalize => false)

  attribute :posts, Array['Post']
end

# in post.rb
class Post
  include Virtus.model(:finalize => false)

  attribute :blog, 'Blog'
end

# after loading both files just do:
Virtus.finalize

# constants will be resolved:
Blog.attribute_set[:posts].member_type.primitive # => Post
Post.attribute_set[:blog].type.primitive # => Blog

Credits

Contributing

  • Fork the project.
  • Make your feature addition or bug fix.
  • Add tests for it. This is important so I don't break it in a future version unintentionally.
  • Commit, do not mess with Rakefile or version (if you want to have your own version, that is fine but bump version in a commit by itself I can ignore when I pull)
  • Send me a pull request. Bonus points for topic branches.

License

Copyright (c) 2011-2013 Piotr Solnica

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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Attributes on Steroids for Plain Old Ruby Objects

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