Clean Code concepts adapted for Ruby.
Inspired by clean-code-javascript.
Note: This is still a WIP. The examples are largely ported over from JavaScript so they may not be idiomatic. Feel free to point out any non-idiomatic Ruby code by submitting an issue and I'll correct it right away. Also, pull requests are always welcome!
- Introduction
- Variables
- Functions
- Objects and Data Structures
- Classes
- SOLID
- Testing
- Error Handling
- Formatting
- Comments
- Translations
Software engineering principles, from Robert C. Martin's book Clean Code, adapted for Ruby. This is not a style guide. It's a guide to producing readable, reusable, and refactorable software in Ruby.
Not every principle herein has to be strictly followed, and even fewer will be universally agreed upon. These are guidelines and nothing more, but they are ones codified over many years of collective experience by the authors of Clean Code.
Our craft of software engineering is just a bit over 50 years old, and we are still learning a lot. When software architecture is as old as architecture itself, maybe then we will have harder rules to follow. For now, let these guidelines serve as a touchstone by which to assess the quality of the Ruby code that you and your team produce.
One more thing: knowing these won't immediately make you a better software developer, and working with them for many years doesn't mean you won't make mistakes. Every piece of code starts as a first draft, like wet clay getting shaped into its final form. Finally, we chisel away the imperfections when we review it with our peers. Don't beat yourself up for first drafts that need improvement. Beat up the code instead!
Bad:
yyyymmdstr = Time.now.strftime('%Y/%m/%d')
Good:
current_date = Time.now.strftime('%Y/%m/%d')
Pick one word for the concept and stick to it. Bad:
user_info
user_data
user_record
starts_at
start_at
start_time
Good:
user
starts_at
We will read more code than we will ever write. It's important that the code we do write is readable and searchable. By not naming variables that end up being meaningful for understanding our program, we hurt our readers. Make your names searchable.
Also, instead of hardcoding values and using "magic numbers", create constants.
Bad:
# What the heck is 86400 for?
status = Timeout::timeout(86_400) do
# ...
end
Good:
# Declare them as capitalized globals.
SECONDS_IN_A_DAY = 86_400
status = Timeout::timeout(SECONDS_IN_A_DAY) do
# ...
end
Bad:
address = 'One Infinite Loop, Cupertino 95014'
city_zip_code_regex = /^[^,\\]+[,\\\s]+(.+?)\s*(\d{5})?$/
save_city_zip_code(city_zip_code_regex.match(address)[1], city_zip_code_regex.match(address)[2])
Good:
address = 'One Infinite Loop, Cupertino 95014'
city_zip_code_regex = /^[^,\\]+[,\\\s]+(.+?)\s*(\d{5})?$/
_, city, zip_code = city_zip_code_regex.match(address).to_a
save_city_zip_code(city, zip_code)
Explicit is better than implicit.
Bad:
locations = ['Austin', 'New York', 'San Francisco']
locations.each do |l|
do_stuff
do_some_other_stuff
# ...
# ...
# ...
# Wait, what is `l` for again?
dispatch(l)
end
Good:
locations = ['Austin', 'New York', 'San Francisco']
locations.each do |location|
do_stuff
do_some_other_stuff
# ...
# ...
# ...
dispatch(location)
end
If your class/object name tells you something, don't repeat that in your variable name.
Bad:
car = {
car_make: 'Honda',
car_model: 'Accord',
car_color: 'Blue'
}
def paint_car(car)
car[:car_color] = 'Red'
end
Good:
car = {
make: 'Honda',
model: 'Accord',
color: 'Blue'
}
def paint_car(car)
car[:color] = 'Red'
end
Default arguments are often cleaner than short circuiting. Be aware that if you use them, your function will only provide default values for undefined arguments. Other "falsy" values such as ''
, ""
, false
and nil
will not be replaced by a default value.
Bad:
def create_micro_brewery(name)
brewery_name = name || 'Hipster Brew Co.'
# ...
end
Good:
def create_micro_brewery(brewery_name = 'Hipster Brew Co.')
# ...
end
Limiting the amount of function parameters is incredibly important because it makes testing your function easier. Having more than three leads to a combinatorial explosion where you have to test tons of different cases with each separate argument.
One or two arguments is the ideal case, and three should be avoided if possible. Anything more than that should be consolidated. Usually, if you have more than two arguments then your function is trying to do too much. In cases where it's not, most of the time a higher-level object will suffice as an argument. Or you can pass data to the function by instance variables.
Since Ruby allows you to make objects on the fly, without a lot of class boilerplate, you can use an object if you are finding yourself needing a lot of arguments. The prevailing pattern in Ruby is to use a hash of arguments.
To make it obvious what properties the function expects, you can use the keyword arguments syntax (introduced in Ruby 2.1). This has a few advantages:
- When someone looks at the function signature, it's immediately clear what properties are being used.
- If a required keyword argument is missing, Ruby will raise a useful
ArgumentError
that tells us which required argument we must include.
Bad:
def create_menu(title, body, button_text, cancellable)
# ...
end
Good:
def create_menu(title:, body:, button_text:, cancellable:)
# ...
end
create_menu(
title: 'Foo',
body: 'Bar',
button_text: 'Baz',
cancellable: true
)
This is by far the most important rule in software engineering. When functions do more than one thing, they are harder to compose, test, and reason about. When you can isolate a function to just one action, they can be refactored easily and your code will read much cleaner. If you take nothing else away from this guide other than this, you'll be ahead of many developers.
Bad:
def email_clients(clients)
clients.each do |client|
client_record = database.lookup(client)
email(client) if client_record.active?
end
end
Good:
def email_active_clients(clients)
clients
.select(&method(:active_client?))
.each(&method(:email))
end
def active_client?(client)
client_record = database.lookup(client)
client_record.active?
end
Bad:
def add_to_date(date, month)
# ...
end
date = DateTime.now
# It's hard to to tell from the function name what is added
add_to_date(date, 1)
Good:
def add_month_to_date(date, month)
# ...
end
date = DateTime.now
add_month_to_date(date, 1)
When you have more than one level of abstraction your function is usually doing too much. Splitting up functions leads to reusability and easier testing. Furthermore, functions should descend by the level of abstraction: one very abstract function should call methods that are less abstract and so on.
Bad:
def interpret(code)
regexes = [
# ...
]
statements = code.split(' ')
tokens = []
regexes.each do |regex|
statements.each do |statement|
# ...
end
end
ast = []
tokens.each do |token|
# lex...
end
result = []
ast.each do |node|
# result.push(...)
end
result
end
Good:
def interpet(code)
tokens = tokenize(code)
ast = lex(tokens)
parse(ast)
end
def tokenize(code)
regexes = [
# ...
]
statements = code.split(' ')
tokens = []
regexes.each do |regex|
statements.each do |statement|
# tokens.push(...)
end
end
tokens
end
def lex(tokens)
ast = []
tokens.each do |token|
# ast.push(...)
end
ast
end
def parse(ast)
result = []
ast.each do |node|
# result.push(...)
end
result
end
Do your absolute best to avoid duplicate code. Duplicate code is bad because it means that there's more than one place to alter something if you need to change some logic.
Imagine if you run a restaurant and you keep track of your inventory: all your tomatoes, onions, garlic, spices, etc. If you have multiple lists that you keep this on, then all have to be updated when you serve a dish with tomatoes in them. If you only have one list, there's only one place to update!
Oftentimes you have duplicate code because you have two or more slightly different things, that share a lot in common, but their differences force you to have two or more separate functions that do much of the same things. Removing duplicate code means creating an abstraction that can handle this set of different things with just one function/module/class.
Getting the abstraction right is critical, that's why you should follow the SOLID principles laid out in the Classes section. Bad abstractions can be worse than duplicate code, so be careful! Having said this, if you can make a good abstraction, do it! Don't repeat yourself, otherwise you'll find yourself updating multiple places anytime you want to change one thing.
Bad:
def show_developer_list(developers)
developers.each do |developer|
data = {
expected_salary: developer.expected_salary,
experience: developer.experience,
github_link: developer.github_link
}
render(data)
end
end
def show_manager_list(managers)
managers.each do |manager|
data = {
expected_salary: manager.expected_salary,
experience: manager.experience,
portfolio: manager.mba_projects
}
render(data)
end
end
Good:
def show_employee_list(employees)
employees.each do |employee|
data = {
expected_salary: employee.expected_salary,
experience: employee.experience
}
case employee.type
when 'manager'
data[:portfolio] = employee.mba_projects
when 'developer'
data[:github_link] = employee.github_link
end
render(data)
end
end
Flags tell your user that this function does more than one thing. Functions should do one thing. Split out your functions if they are following different code paths based on a boolean.
Bad:
def create_file(name, temp)
if temp
fs.create("./temp/#{name}")
else
fs.create(name)
end
end
Good:
def create_file(name)
fs.create(name)
end
def create_temp_file(name)
create_file("./temp/#{name}")
end
A function produces a side effect if it does anything other than take a value in and return another value or values. A side effect could be writing to a file, modifying some global variable, or accidentally wiring all your money to a stranger.
Now, you do need to have side effects in a program on occasion. Like the previous example, you might need to write to a file. What you want to do is to centralize where you are doing this. Don't have several functions and classes that write to a particular file. Have one service that does it. One and only one.
The main point is to avoid common pitfalls like sharing state between objects without any structure, using mutable data types that can be written to by anything, and not centralizing where your side effects occur. If you can do this, you will be happier than the vast majority of other programmers.
Bad:
# Global variable referenced by following function.
# If we had another function that used this name, now it'd be an array and it could break it.
$name = 'Ryan McDermott'
def split_into_first_and_last_name
$name = $name.split(' ')
end
split_into_first_and_last_name()
puts $name # ['Ryan', 'McDermott']
Good:
def split_into_first_and_last_name(name)
name.split(' ')
end
name = 'Ryan McDermott'
new_name = split_into_first_and_last_name(name)
puts name # 'Ryan McDermott'
puts new_name # ['Ryan', 'McDermott']
In Ruby, everything is an object and everything is passed by value, but these values are references to objects. In the case of objects and arrays, if your function makes a change
in a shopping cart array, for example, by adding an item to purchase,
then any other function that uses that cart
array will be affected by this
addition. That may be great, however it can be bad too. Let's imagine a bad
situation:
The user clicks the "Purchase", button which calls a purchase
function that
spawns a network request and sends the cart
array to the server. Because
of a bad network connection, the purchase
function has to keep retrying the
request. Now, what if in the meantime the user accidentally clicks "Add to Cart"
button on an item they don't actually want before the network request begins?
If that happens and the network request begins, then that purchase function
will send the accidentally added item because it has a reference to a shopping
cart array that the add_item_to_cart
function modified by adding an unwanted
item.
A great solution would be for the add_item_to_cart
to always clone the cart
,
edit it, and return the clone. This ensures that no other functions that are
holding onto a reference of the shopping cart will be affected by any changes.
Two caveats to mention to this approach:
-
There might be cases where you actually want to modify the input object, but when you adopt this programming practice you will find that those cases are pretty rare. Most things can be refactored to have no side effects!
-
Cloning big objects can be very expensive in terms of performance. Luckily, this isn't a big issue in practice because there are great gems that allow this kind of programming approach to be fast and not as memory intensive as it would be for you to manually clone objects and arrays.
Bad:
def add_item_to_cart(cart, item)
cart.push(item: item, time: Time.now)
end
Good:
def add_item_to_cart(cart, item)
cart + [{ item: item, time: Time.now }]
end
Ruby isn't a functional language in the way that Haskell is, but it has a functional flavor to it. Functional languages are cleaner and easier to test. Favor this style of programming when you can.
Bad:
programmer_output = [
{
name: 'Uncle Bobby',
lines_of_code: 500
}, {
name: 'Suzie Q',
lines_of_code: 1500
}, {
name: 'Jimmy Gosling',
lines_of_code: 150
}, {
name: 'Grace Hopper',
lines_of_code: 1000
}
]
total_output = 0
programmer_output.each do |output|
total_output += output[:lines_of_code]
end
Good:
programmer_output = [
{
name: 'Uncle Bobby',
lines_of_code: 500
}, {
name: 'Suzie Q',
lines_of_code: 1500
}, {
name: 'Jimmy Gosling',
lines_of_code: 150
}, {
name: 'Grace Hopper',
lines_of_code: 1000
}
]
INITIAL_VALUE = 0
total_output = programmer_output
.reduce(INITIAL_VALUE) { |acc, output| acc + output[:lines_of_code] }
Bad:
if params[:message].present? && params[:recipient].present?
# ...
end
Good:
def send_message?(params)
params[:message].present? && params[:recipient].present?
end
if send_message?(params)
# ...
end
Bad:
if !genres.blank?
# ...
end
Good:
unless genres.blank?
# ...
end
# or
if genres.present?
# ...
end
This seems like an impossible task. Upon first hearing this, most people say,
"how am I supposed to do anything without an if
statement?" The answer is that
you can use polymorphism to achieve the same task in many cases. The second
question is usually, "well that's great but why would I want to do that?" The
answer is a previous clean code concept we learned: a function should only do
one thing. When you have classes and functions that have if
statements, you
are telling your user that your function does more than one thing. Remember,
just do one thing.
Bad:
class Airplane
# ...
def cruising_altitude
case @type
when '777'
max_altitude - passenger_count
when 'Air Force One'
max_altitude
when 'Cessna'
max_altitude - fuel_expenditure
end
end
end
Good:
class Airplane
# ...
end
class Boeing777 < Airplane
# ...
def cruising_altitude
max_altitude - passenger_count
end
end
class AirForceOne < Airplane
# ...
def cruising_altitude
max_altitude
end
end
class Cessna < Airplane
# ...
def cruising_altitude
max_altitude - fuel_expenditure
end
end
Ruby is untyped, which means your functions can take any type of argument. Sometimes you are bitten by this freedom and it becomes tempting to do type-checking in your functions. There are many ways to avoid having to do this. The first thing to consider is consistent APIs.
Bad:
def travel_to_texas(vehicle)
if vehicle.is_a?(Bicycle)
vehicle.pedal(@current_location, Location.new('texas'))
elsif vehicle.is_a?(Car)
vehicle.drive(@current_location, Location.new('texas'))
end
end
Good:
def travel_to_texas(vehicle)
vehicle.move(@current_location, Location.new('texas'))
end
If you are working with basic values like strings and integers, and you can't use polymorphism but you still feel the need to type-check, you should consider using contracts.ruby. The problem with manually type-checking Ruby is that doing it well requires so much extra verbiage that the faux "type-safety" you get doesn't make up for the lost readability. Keep your Ruby clean, write good tests, and have good code reviews.
Bad:
def combine(val1, val2)
if (val1.is_a?(Numeric) && val2.is_a?(Numeric)) ||
(val1.is_a?(String) && va2.is_a?(String))
val1 + val2
end
raise 'Must be of type String or Numeric'
end
Good:
def combine(val1, val2)
val1 + val2
end
Dead code is just as bad as duplicate code. There's no reason to keep it in your codebase. If it's not being called, get rid of it! It will still be safe in your version history if you still need it.
Bad:
def old_request_module(url)
# ...
end
def new_request_module(url)
# ...
end
req = new_request_module(request_url)
inventory_tracker('apples', req, 'www.inventory-awesome.io')
Good:
def new_request_module(url)
# ...
end
req = new_request_module(request_url)
inventory_tracker('apples', req, 'www.inventory-awesome.io')
Using getters and setters to access data on objects could be better than simply looking for a property on an object. "Why?" you might ask. Well, here's an unorganized list of reasons why:
- When you want to do more beyond getting an object property, you don't have to look up and change every accessor in your codebase.
- Makes adding validation simple when doing a
set
. - Encapsulates the internal representation.
- Easy to add logging and error handling when getting and setting.
- You can lazy load your object's properties, let's say getting it from a server.
Bad:
def make_bank_account
# ...
{
balance: 0
# ...
}
end
account = make_bank_account
account[:balance] = 100
account[:balance] # => 100
Good:
class BankAccount
def initialize
# this one is private
@balance = 0
end
# a "getter" via a public instance method
def balance
# do some logging
@balance
end
# a "setter" via a public instance method
def balance=(amount)
# do some logging
# do some validation
@balance = amount
end
end
account = BankAccount.new
account.balance = 100
account.balance # => 100
Alternatively, if your getters and setters are absolutely trivial, you should use attr_accessor
to define them. This is especially convenient for implementing data-like objects which expose data to other parts of the system (e.g., ActiveRecord objects, response wrappers for remote APIs).
Good:
class Toy
attr_accessor :price
end
toy = Toy.new
toy.price = 50
toy.price # => 50
However, you have to be aware that in some situations, using attr_accessor
is a code smell, read more here.
A Fluent interface is an object oriented API that aims to improve the readability of the source code by using method chaining.
While there can be some contexts, frequently builder objects, where this pattern reduces the verbosity of the code (e.g., ActiveRecord queries), more often it comes at some costs:
- Breaks Encapsulation
- Breaks Decorators
- Is harder to mock in a test suite
- Makes diffs of commits harder to read
For more informations you can read the full blog post on this topic written by Marco Pivetta.
Bad:
class Car
def initialize(make, model, color)
@make = make
@model = model
@color = color
# NOTE: Returning self for chaining
self
end
def set_make(make)
@make = make
# NOTE: Returning self for chaining
self
end
def set_model(model)
@model = model
# NOTE: Returning self for chaining
self
end
def set_color(color)
@color = color
# NOTE: Returning self for chaining
self
end
def save
# save object...
# NOTE: Returning self for chaining
self
end
end
car = Car.new('Ford','F-150','red')
.set_color('pink')
.save
Good:
class Car
attr_accessor :make, :model, :color
def initialize(make, model, color)
@make = make
@model = model
@color = color
end
def save
# Save object...
end
end
car = Car.new('Ford', 'F-150', 'red')
car.color = 'pink'
car.save
As stated famously in Design Patterns by the Gang of Four, you should prefer composition over inheritance where you can. There are lots of good reasons to use inheritance and lots of good reasons to use composition. The main point for this maxim is that if your mind instinctively goes for inheritance, try to think if composition could model your problem better. In some cases it can.
You might be wondering then, "when should I use inheritance?" It depends on your problem at hand, but this is a decent list of when inheritance makes more sense than composition:
- Your inheritance represents an "is-a" relationship and not a "has-a" relationship (Human->Animal vs. User->UserDetails).
- You can reuse code from the base classes (Humans can move like all animals).
- You want to make global changes to derived classes by changing a base class. (Change the caloric expenditure of all animals when they move).
Bad:
class Employee
def initialize(name, email)
@name = name
@email = email
end
# ...
end
# Bad because Employees "have" tax data. EmployeeTaxData is not a type of Employee
class EmployeeTaxData < Employee
def initialize(ssn, salary)
super()
@ssn = ssn
@salary = salary
end
# ...
end
Good:
class EmployeeTaxData
def initialize(ssn, salary)
@ssn = ssn
@salary = salary
end
# ...
end
class Employee
def initialize(name, email)
this.name = name
this.email = email
end
def set_tax_data(ssn, salary)
@tax_data = EmployeeTaxData.new(ssn, salary)
end
# ...
end
As stated in Clean Code, "There should never be more than one reason for a class to change". It's tempting to jam-pack a class with a lot of functionality, like when you can only take one suitcase on your flight. The issue with this is that your class won't be conceptually cohesive and it will give it many reasons to change. Minimizing the amount of times you need to change a class is important. It's important because if too much functionality is in one class and you modify a piece of it, it can be difficult to understand how that will affect other dependent modules in your codebase.
Bad:
class UserSettings
def initialize(user)
@user = user
end
def change_settings(settings)
return unless valid_credentials?
# ...
end
def valid_credentials?
# ...
end
end
Good:
class UserAuth
def initialize(user)
@user = user
end
def valid_credentials?
# ...
end
end
class UserSettings
def initialize(user)
@user = user
@auth = UserAuth.new(user)
end
def change_settings(settings)
return unless @auth.valid_credentials?
# ...
end
end
As stated by Bertrand Meyer, "software entities (classes, modules, functions, etc.) should be open for extension, but closed for modification." What does that mean though? This principle basically states that you should allow users to add new functionalities without changing existing code.
Bad:
class Adapter
attr_reader :name
end
class AjaxAdapter < Adapter
def initialize
super()
@name = 'ajaxAdapter'
end
end
class NodeAdapter < Adapter
def initialize
super()
@name = 'nodeAdapter'
end
end
class HttpRequester
def initialize(adapter)
@adapter = adapter
end
def fetch(url)
adapter_name = @adapter.name
if adapter_name == 'ajaxAdapter'
make_ajax_call(url)
elsif adapter_name == 'httpNodeAdapter'
make_http_call(url)
end
end
def make_ajax_call(url)
# ...
end
def make_http_call(url)
# ...
end
end
Good:
class Adapter
attr_reader :name
end
class AjaxAdapter < Adapter
def initialize
super()
@name = 'ajaxAdapter'
end
def request(url)
# ...
end
end
class NodeAdapter < Adapter
def initialize
super()
@name = 'nodeAdapter'
end
def request(url)
# ...
end
end
class HttpRequester
def initialize(adapter)
@adapter = adapter
end
def fetch(url)
@adapter.request(url)
end
end
This is a scary term for a very simple concept. It's formally defined as "If S is a subtype of T, then objects of type T may be replaced with objects of type S (i.e., objects of type S may substitute objects of type T) without altering any of the desirable properties of that program (correctness, task performed, etc.)." That's an even scarier definition.
The best explanation for this is if you have a parent class and a child class, then the base class can always be replaced by the child class without getting incorrect results. This might still be confusing, so let's take a look at the classic Square-Rectangle example. Mathematically, a square is a rectangle, but if you model it using the "is-a" relationship via inheritance, you quickly get into trouble.
Bad:
class Rectangle
def initialize
@width = 0
@height = 0
end
def color=(color)
# ...
end
def render(area)
# ...
end
def width=(width)
@width = width
end
def height=(height)
@height = height
end
def area
@width * @height
end
end
class Square < Rectangle
def width=(width)
@width = width
@height = width
end
def height=(height)
@width = height
@height = height
end
end
def render_large_rectangles(rectangles)
rectangles.each do |rectangle|
rectangle.width = 4
rectangle.height = 5
area = rectangle.area # BAD: Returns 25 for Square. Should be 20.
rectangle.render(area)
end
end
rectangles = [Rectangle.new, Rectangle.new, Square.new]
render_large_rectangles(rectangles)
Good:
class Shape
def color=(color)
# ...
end
def render(area)
# ...
end
end
class Rectangle < Shape
def initialize(width, height)
super()
@width = width
@height = height
end
def area
@width * @height
end
end
class Square < Shape
def initialize(length)
super()
@length = length
end
def area
@length * @length
end
end
def render_large_shapes(shapes)
shapes.each do |shape|
area = shape.area
shape.render(area)
end
end
shapes = [Rectangle.new(4, 5), Rectangle.new(4, 5), Square.new(5)]
render_large_shapes(shapes)
Ruby doesn't have interfaces so this principle doesn't apply as strictly as others. However, it's important and relevant even with Ruby's lack of type system.
ISP states that "Clients should not be forced to depend upon interfaces that they do not use." Interfaces are implicit contracts in Ruby because of duck typing.
When a client depends upon a class that contains interfaces that the client does not use, but that other clients do use, then that client will be affected by the changes that those other clients force upon the class.
The following example is taken from here.
Bad:
class Car
# used by Driver
def open
# ...
end
# used by Driver
def start_engine
# ...
end
# used by Mechanic
def change_engine
# ...
end
end
class Driver
def drive
@car.open
@car.start_engine
end
end
class Mechanic
def do_stuff
@car.change_engine
end
end
Good:
# used by Driver only
class Car
def open
# ...
end
def start_engine
# ...
end
end
# used by Mechanic only
class CarInternals
def change_engine
# ...
end
end
class Driver
def drive
@car.open
@car.start_engine
end
end
class Mechanic
def do_stuff
@car_internals.change_engine
end
end
This principle states two essential things:
- High-level modules should not depend on low-level modules. Both should depend on abstractions.
- Abstractions should not depend upon details. Details should depend on abstractions.
Simply put, DIP keeps high-level modules from knowing the details of its low-level modules and setting them up. It can accomplish this through DI. A huge benefit of this is that it reduces the coupling between modules. Coupling is a very bad development pattern because it makes your code hard to refactor.
As stated previously, Ruby doesn't have interfaces so the abstractions
that are depended upon are implicit contracts. That is to say, the methods
and properties that an object/class exposes to another object/class. In the
example below, the implicit contract is that any Request module for an
InventoryTracker
will have a request_items
method.
Bad:
class InventoryRequester
def initialize
@req_methods = ['HTTP']
end
def request_item(item)
# ...
end
end
class InventoryTracker
def initialize(items)
@items = items
# BAD: We have created a dependency on a specific request implementation.
@requester = InventoryRequester.new
end
def request_items
@items.each do |item|
@requester.request_item(item)
end
end
end
inventory_tracker = InventoryTracker.new(['apples', 'bananas'])
inventory_tracker.request_items
Good:
class InventoryTracker
def initialize(items, requester)
@items = items
@requester = requester
end
def request_items
@items.each do |item|
@requester.request_item(item)
end
end
end
class InventoryRequesterV1
def initialize
@req_methods = ['HTTP']
end
def request_item(item)
# ...
end
end
class InventoryRequesterV2
def initialize
@req_methods = ['WS']
end
def request_item(item)
# ...
end
end
# By constructing our dependencies externally and injecting them, we can easily
# substitute our request module for a fancy new one that uses WebSockets.
inventory_tracker = InventoryTracker.new(['apples', 'bananas'], InventoryRequesterV2.new)
inventory_tracker.request_items
Testing is more important than shipping. If you have no tests or an inadequate amount, then every time you ship code you won't be sure that you didn't break anything. Deciding on what constitutes an adequate amount is up to your team, but having 100% coverage (all statements and branches) is how you achieve very high confidence and developer peace of mind. This means that in addition to having a great testing framework, you also need to use a good coverage tool.
There's no excuse to not write tests. Ruby comes with its own testing tool (RSpec) built right in. Aim to always write tests for every new feature/module you introduce. If your preferred method is Test Driven Development (TDD), that is great, but the main point is to just make sure you are reaching your coverage goals before launching any feature, or refactoring an existing one.
Bad:
require 'rspec'
describe 'Calculator' do
let(:calculator) { Calculator.new }
it 'performs addition, subtraction, multiplication and division' do
expect(calculator.calculate('1 + 2')).to eq(3)
expect(calculator.calculate('4 - 2')).to eq(2)
expect(calculator.calculate('2 * 3')).to eq(6)
expect(calculator.calculate('6 / 2')).to eq(3)
end
end
Good:
require 'rspec'
describe 'Calculator' do
let(:calculator) { Calculator.new }
it 'performs addition' do
expect(calculator.calculate('1 + 2')).to eq(3)
end
it 'performs subtraction' do
expect(calculator.calculate('4 - 2')).to eq(2)
end
it 'performs multiplication' do
expect(calculator.calculate('2 * 3')).to eq(6)
end
it 'performs division' do
expect(calculator.calculate('6 / 2')).to eq(3)
end
end
Thrown errors are a good thing! They mean the runtime has successfully identified when something in your program has gone wrong and it's letting you know by stopping function execution on the current stack, killing the process, and notifying you in the logs with a stack trace.
Doing nothing with a caught error doesn't give you the ability to ever fix
or react to said error. Logging the error
isn't much better as often times it can get lost in a sea of other logs. If you wrap any bit of code in a begin/rescue
it means you
think an error may occur there and therefore you should have a plan,
or create a code path, for when it occurs.
Bad:
require 'logger'
logger = Logger.new(STDOUT)
begin
function_that_might_throw()
rescue StandardError => err
logger.info(err)
end
Good:
require 'logger'
logger = Logger.new(STDOUT)
# Change the logger level to ERROR to output only logs with ERROR level and above
logger.level = Logger::ERROR
begin
function_that_might_throw()
rescue StandardError => err
# Option 1: Only log errors
logger.error(err)
# Option 2: Notify end-user via an interface
notify_user_of_error(err)
# Option 3: Report error to a third-party service like Honeybadger
report_error_to_service(err)
# OR do all three!
end
Use a descriptive error class name and a message when you raise an error. That way you know why the error occured and you can rescue the specific type of error.
Bad:
def initialize(user)
fail unless user
...
end
Good:
def initialize(user)
fail ArgumentError, 'Missing user' unless user
...
end
Formatting is subjective. Like many rules herein, there is no hard and fast rule that you must follow. The main point is DO NOT ARGUE over formatting. There are tons of tools like RuboCop to automate this. Use one! It's a waste of time and money for engineers to argue over formatting.
For things that don't fall under the purview of automatic formatting (indentation, tabs vs. spaces, double vs. single quotes, etc.) look here for some guidance.
Ruby is untyped, so capitalization tells you a lot about your variables, functions, etc. These rules are subjective, so your team can choose whatever they want. The point is, no matter what you all choose, just be consistent.
Bad:
DAYS_IN_WEEK = 7
daysInMonth = 30
songs = ['Back In Black', 'Stairway to Heaven', 'Hey Jude']
Artists = ['ACDC', 'Led Zeppelin', 'The Beatles']
def eraseDatabase; end
def restore_database; end
class ANIMAL; end
class Alpaca; end
Good:
DAYS_IN_WEEK = 7
DAYS_IN_MONTH = 30
SONGS = ['Back In Black', 'Stairway to Heaven', 'Hey Jude'].freeze
ARTISTS = ['ACDC', 'Led Zeppelin', 'The Beatles'].freeze
def erase_database; end
def restore_database; end
class Animal; end
class Alpaca; end
If a function calls another, keep those functions vertically close in the source file. Ideally, keep the caller right above the callee. We tend to read code from top-to-bottom, like a newspaper. Because of this, make your code read that way.
Bad:
class PerformanceReview
def initialize(employee)
@employee = employee
end
def lookup_peers
db.lookup(@employee, 'peers')
end
def lookup_manager
db.lookup(@employee, 'manager')
end
def peer_reviews
peers = lookup_peers
# ...
end
def perf_review
peer_reviews
manager_review
self_review
end
def manager_review
manager = lookup_manager
# ...
end
def self_review
# ...
end
end
review = PerformanceReview.new(employee)
review.perf_review
Good:
class PerformanceReview
def initialize(employee)
@employee = employee
end
def perf_review
peer_reviews
manager_review
self_review
end
def peer_reviews
peers = lookup_peers
# ...
end
def lookup_peers
db.lookup(@employee, 'peers')
end
def manager_review
manager = lookup_manager
# ...
end
def lookup_manager
db.lookup(@employee, 'manager')
end
def self_review
# ...
end
end
review = PerformanceReview.new(employee)
review.perf_review
Version control exists for a reason. Leave old code in your history.
Bad:
do_stuff
# do_other_stuff
# do_some_more_stuff
# do_so_much_stuff
Good:
do_stuff
Remember, use version control! There's no need for dead code, commented code,
and especially journal comments. Use git log
to get history!
Bad:
# 2016-12-20: Removed monads, didn't understand them (RM)
# 2016-10-01: Improved using special monads (JP)
# 2016-02-03: Removed type-checking (LI)
# 2015-03-14: Added combine with type-checking (JR)
def combine(a, b)
a + b
end
Good:
def combine(a, b)
a + b
end
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