Extends the module object with class/module and instance accessors for class/module attributes, just like the native attr* accessors for instance attributes.
Extends the module object with class/module and instance accessors for class/module attributes, just like the native attr* accessors for instance attributes, but does so on a per-thread basis.
So the values are scoped within the Thread.current space under the class name of the module.
Namespace
Module
Class
Methods
- alias_attribute
- anonymous?
- attr_internal
- attr_internal_accessor
- attr_internal_reader
- attr_internal_writer
- cattr_accessor
- cattr_reader
- cattr_writer
- delegate
- delegate_missing_to
- deprecate
- mattr_accessor
- mattr_reader
- mattr_writer
- module_parent
- module_parent_name
- module_parents
- redefine_method
- redefine_singleton_method
- remove_possible_method
- remove_possible_singleton_method
- silence_redefinition_of_method
- thread_cattr_accessor
- thread_mattr_accessor
Included Modules
Constants
| DELEGATION_RESERVED_KEYWORDS | = | %w(_ arg args block) | 
| DELEGATION_RESERVED_METHOD_NAMES | = | Set.new( RUBY_RESERVED_KEYWORDS + DELEGATION_RESERVED_KEYWORDS ).freeze | 
| RUBY_RESERVED_KEYWORDS | = | %w(alias and BEGIN begin break case class def defined? do else elsif END end ensure false for if in module next nil not or redo rescue retry return self super then true undef unless until when while yield) | 
Attributes
| [RW] | attr_internal_naming_format | 
Instance Public methods
alias_attribute(new_name, old_name)
Allows you to make aliases for attributes, which includes getter, setter, and a predicate.
class Content < ActiveRecord::Base
  # has a title attribute
end
class Email < Content
  alias_attribute :subject, :title
end
e = Email.find(1)
e.title    # => "Superstars"
e.subject  # => "Superstars"
e.subject? # => true
e.subject = "Megastars"
e.title    # => "Megastars"
📝 Source code
# File activesupport/lib/active_support/core_ext/module/aliasing.rb, line 21
  def alias_attribute(new_name, old_name)
    # The following reader methods use an explicit `self` receiver in order to
    # support aliases that start with an uppercase letter. Otherwise, they would
    # be resolved as constants instead.
    module_eval <<-STR, __FILE__, __LINE__ + 1
      def #{new_name}; self.#{old_name}; end          # def subject; self.title; end
      def #{new_name}?; self.#{old_name}?; end        # def subject?; self.title?; end
      def #{new_name}=(v); self.#{old_name} = v; end  # def subject=(v); self.title = v; end
    STR
  endanonymous?()
A module may or may not have a name.
module M; end
M.name # => "M"
m = Module.new
m.name # => nil
anonymous? method returns true if module does not have a name, false otherwise:
Module.new.anonymous? # => true
module M; end
M.anonymous?          # => false
A module gets a name when it is first assigned to a constant. Either via the module or class keyword or by an explicit assignment:
m = Module.new # creates an anonymous module
m.anonymous?   # => true
M = m          # m gets a name here as a side-effect
m.name         # => "M"
m.anonymous?   # => false
📝 Source code
# File activesupport/lib/active_support/core_ext/module/anonymous.rb, line 27
  def anonymous?
    name.nil?
  endattr_internal_accessor(*attrs)
Declares an attribute reader and writer backed by an internally-named instance variable.
📝 Source code
# File activesupport/lib/active_support/core_ext/module/attr_internal.rb, line 16
  def attr_internal_accessor(*attrs)
    attr_internal_reader(*attrs)
    attr_internal_writer(*attrs)
  endattr_internal_reader(*attrs)
Declares an attribute reader backed by an internally-named instance variable.
📝 Source code
# File activesupport/lib/active_support/core_ext/module/attr_internal.rb, line 5
  def attr_internal_reader(*attrs)
    attrs.each { |attr_name| attr_internal_define(attr_name, :reader) }
  endattr_internal_writer(*attrs)
Declares an attribute writer backed by an internally-named instance variable.
📝 Source code
# File activesupport/lib/active_support/core_ext/module/attr_internal.rb, line 10
  def attr_internal_writer(*attrs)
    attrs.each { |attr_name| attr_internal_define(attr_name, :writer) }
  endcattr_accessor(*syms, instance_reader: true, instance_writer: true, instance_accessor: true, default: nil, &blk)
cattr_reader(*syms, instance_reader: true, instance_accessor: true, default: nil, location: nil)
cattr_writer(*syms, instance_writer: true, instance_accessor: true, default: nil, location: nil)
delegate(*methods, to: nil, prefix: nil, allow_nil: nil, private: nil)
Provides a delegate class method to easily expose contained objects' public methods as your own.
Options
- 
:to- Specifies the target object name as a symbol or string
- 
:prefix- Prefixes the new method with the target name or a custom prefix
- 
:allow_nil- If set to true, prevents aModule::DelegationErrorfrom being raised
- 
:private- If set to true, changes method visibility to private
The macro receives one or more method names (specified as symbols or strings) and the name of the target object via the :to option (also a symbol or string).
Delegation is particularly useful with Active Record associations:
class Greeter < ActiveRecord::Base
  def hello
    'hello'
  end
  def goodbye
    'goodbye'
  end
end
class Foo < ActiveRecord::Base
  belongs_to :greeter
  delegate :hello, to: :greeter
end
Foo.new.hello   # => "hello"
Foo.new.goodbye # => NoMethodError: undefined method `goodbye' for #<Foo:0x1af30c>
Multiple delegates to the same target are allowed:
class Foo < ActiveRecord::Base
  belongs_to :greeter
  delegate :hello, :goodbye, to: :greeter
end
Foo.new.goodbye # => "goodbye"
Methods can be delegated to instance variables, class variables, or constants by providing them as a symbols:
class Foo
  CONSTANT_ARRAY = [0,1,2,3]
  @@class_array  = [4,5,6,7]
  def initialize
    @instance_array = [8,9,10,11]
  end
  delegate :sum, to: :CONSTANT_ARRAY
  delegate :min, to: :@@class_array
  delegate :max, to: :@instance_array
end
Foo.new.sum # => 6
Foo.new.min # => 4
Foo.new.max # => 11
It's also possible to delegate a method to the class by using :class:
class Foo
  def self.hello
    "world"
  end
  delegate :hello, to: :class
end
Foo.new.hello # => "world"
Delegates can optionally be prefixed using the :prefix option. If the value is true, the delegate methods are prefixed with the name of the object being delegated to.
Person = Struct.new(:name, :address)
class Invoice < Struct.new(:client)
  delegate :name, :address, to: :client, prefix: true
end
john_doe = Person.new('John Doe', 'Vimmersvej 13')
invoice = Invoice.new(john_doe)
invoice.client_name    # => "John Doe"
invoice.client_address # => "Vimmersvej 13"
It is also possible to supply a custom prefix.
class Invoice < Struct.new(:client)
  delegate :name, :address, to: :client, prefix: :customer
end
invoice = Invoice.new(john_doe)
invoice.customer_name    # => 'John Doe'
invoice.customer_address # => 'Vimmersvej 13'
The delegated methods are public by default. Pass private: true to change that.
class User < ActiveRecord::Base
  has_one :profile
  delegate :first_name, to: :profile
  delegate :date_of_birth, to: :profile, private: true
  def age
    Date.today.year - date_of_birth.year
  end
end
User.new.first_name # => "Tomas"
User.new.date_of_birth # => NoMethodError: private method `date_of_birth' called for #<User:0x00000008221340>
User.new.age # => 2
If the target is nil and does not respond to the delegated method a Module::DelegationError is raised. If you wish to instead return nil, use the :allow_nil option.
class User < ActiveRecord::Base
  has_one :profile
  delegate :age, to: :profile
end
User.new.age
# => Module::DelegationError: User#age delegated to profile.age, but profile is nil
But if not having a profile yet is fine and should not be an error condition:
class User < ActiveRecord::Base
  has_one :profile
  delegate :age, to: :profile, allow_nil: true
end
User.new.age # nil
Note that if the target is not nil then the call is attempted regardless of the :allow_nil option, and thus an exception is still raised if said object does not respond to the method:
class Foo
  def initialize(bar)
    @bar = bar
  end
  delegate :name, to: :@bar, allow_nil: true
end
Foo.new("Bar").name # raises NoMethodError: undefined method `name'
The target method must be public, otherwise it will raise NoMethodError.
📝 Source code
# File activesupport/lib/active_support/core_ext/module/delegation.rb, line 171
  def delegate(*methods, to: nil, prefix: nil, allow_nil: nil, private: nil)
    unless to
      raise ArgumentError, "Delegation needs a target. Supply a keyword argument 'to' (e.g. delegate :hello, to: :greeter)."
    end
    if prefix == true && /^[^a-z_]/.match?(to)
      raise ArgumentError, "Can only automatically set the delegation prefix when delegating to a method."
    end
    method_prefix = \
      if prefix
        "#{prefix == true ? to : prefix}_"
      else
        ""
      end
    location = caller_locations(1, 1).first
    file, line = location.path, location.lineno
    to = to.to_s
    to = "self.#{to}" if DELEGATION_RESERVED_METHOD_NAMES.include?(to)
    method_def = []
    method_names = []
    methods.map do |method|
      method_name = prefix ? "#{method_prefix}#{method}" : method
      method_names << method_name.to_sym
      # Attribute writer methods only accept one argument. Makes sure []=
      # methods still accept two arguments.
      definition = if /[^\]]=$/.match?(method)
        "arg"
      elsif RUBY_VERSION >= "2.7"
        "..."
      else
        "*args, &block"
      end
      # The following generated method calls the target exactly once, storing
      # the returned value in a dummy variable.
      #
      # Reason is twofold: On one hand doing less calls is in general better.
      # On the other hand it could be that the target has side-effects,
      # whereas conceptually, from the user point of view, the delegator should
      # be doing one call.
      if allow_nil
        method = method.to_s
        method_def <<
          "def #{method_name}(#{definition})" <<
          "  _ = #{to}" <<
          "  if !_.nil? || nil.respond_to?(:#{method})" <<
          "    _.#{method}(#{definition})" <<
          "  end" <<
          "end"
      else
        method = method.to_s
        method_name = method_name.to_s
        method_def <<
          "def #{method_name}(#{definition})" <<
          "  _ = #{to}" <<
          "  _.#{method}(#{definition})" <<
          "rescue NoMethodError => e" <<
          "  if _.nil? && e.name == :#{method}" <<
          %(   raise DelegationError, "#{self}##{method_name} delegated to #{to}.#{method}, but #{to} is nil: \#{self.inspect}") <<
          "  else" <<
          "    raise" <<
          "  end" <<
          "end"
      end
    end
    module_eval(method_def.join(";"), file, line)
    private(*method_names) if private
    method_names
  enddelegate_missing_to(target, allow_nil: nil)
When building decorators, a common pattern may emerge:
class Partition
  def initialize(event)
    @event = event
  end
  def person
    detail.person || creator
  end
  private
    def respond_to_missing?(name, include_private = false)
      @event.respond_to?(name, include_private)
    end
    def method_missing(method, *args, &block)
      @event.send(method, *args, &block)
    end
end
With Module#delegate_missing_to, the above is condensed to:
class Partition
  delegate_missing_to :@event
  def initialize(event)
    @event = event
  end
  def person
    detail.person || creator
  end
end
The target can be anything callable within the object, e.g. instance variables, methods, constants, etc.
The delegated method must be public on the target, otherwise it will raise DelegationError. If you wish to instead return nil, use the :allow_nil option.
The marshal_dump and _dump methods are exempt from delegation due to possible interference when calling Marshal.dump(object), should the delegation target method of object add or remove instance variables.
📝 Source code
# File activesupport/lib/active_support/core_ext/module/delegation.rb, line 295
  def delegate_missing_to(target, allow_nil: nil)
    target = target.to_s
    target = "self.#{target}" if DELEGATION_RESERVED_METHOD_NAMES.include?(target)
    module_eval <<-RUBY, __FILE__, __LINE__ + 1
      def respond_to_missing?(name, include_private = false)
        # It may look like an oversight, but we deliberately do not pass
        # +include_private+, because they do not get delegated.
        return false if name == :marshal_dump || name == :_dump
        #{target}.respond_to?(name) || super
      end
      def method_missing(method, *args, &block)
        if #{target}.respond_to?(method)
          #{target}.public_send(method, *args, &block)
        else
          begin
            super
          rescue NoMethodError
            if #{target}.nil?
              if #{allow_nil == true}
                nil
              else
                raise DelegationError, "\#{method} delegated to #{target}, but #{target} is nil"
              end
            else
              raise
            end
          end
        end
      end
      ruby2_keywords(:method_missing) if respond_to?(:ruby2_keywords, true)
    RUBY
  enddeprecate(*method_names)
deprecate :foo
deprecate bar: 'message'
deprecate :foo, :bar, baz: 'warning!', qux: 'gone!'
You can also use custom deprecator instance:
deprecate :foo, deprecator: MyLib::Deprecator.new
deprecate :foo, bar: "warning!", deprecator: MyLib::Deprecator.new
Custom deprecators must respond to deprecation_warning(deprecated_method_name, message, caller_backtrace) method where you can implement your custom warning behavior.
class MyLib::Deprecator
  def deprecation_warning(deprecated_method_name, message, caller_backtrace = nil)
    message = "#{deprecated_method_name} is deprecated and will be removed from MyLibrary | #{message}"
    Kernel.warn message
  end
end
📝 Source code
# File activesupport/lib/active_support/core_ext/module/deprecation.rb, line 22
  def deprecate(*method_names)
    ActiveSupport::Deprecation.deprecate_methods(self, *method_names)
  endmattr_accessor(*syms, instance_reader: true, instance_writer: true, instance_accessor: true, default: nil, &blk)
Defines both class and instance accessors for class attributes. All class and instance methods created will be public, even if this method is called with a private or protected access modifier.
module HairColors
  mattr_accessor :hair_colors
end
class Person
  include HairColors
end
HairColors.hair_colors = [:brown, :black, :blonde, :red]
HairColors.hair_colors # => [:brown, :black, :blonde, :red]
Person.new.hair_colors # => [:brown, :black, :blonde, :red]
If a subclass changes the value then that would also change the value for parent class. Similarly if parent class changes the value then that would change the value of subclasses too.
class Citizen < Person
end
Citizen.new.hair_colors << :blue
Person.new.hair_colors # => [:brown, :black, :blonde, :red, :blue]
To omit the instance writer method, pass instance_writer: false. To omit the instance reader method, pass instance_reader: false.
module HairColors
  mattr_accessor :hair_colors, instance_writer: false, instance_reader: false
end
class Person
  include HairColors
end
Person.new.hair_colors = [:brown]  # => NoMethodError
Person.new.hair_colors             # => NoMethodError
Or pass instance_accessor: false, to omit both instance methods.
module HairColors
  mattr_accessor :hair_colors, instance_accessor: false
end
class Person
  include HairColors
end
Person.new.hair_colors = [:brown]  # => NoMethodError
Person.new.hair_colors             # => NoMethodError
You can set a default value for the attribute.
module HairColors
  mattr_accessor :hair_colors, default: [:brown, :black, :blonde, :red]
end
class Person
  include HairColors
end
Person.class_variable_get("@@hair_colors") # => [:brown, :black, :blonde, :red]
📝 Source code
# File activesupport/lib/active_support/core_ext/module/attribute_accessors.rb, line 200
  def mattr_accessor(*syms, instance_reader: true, instance_writer: true, instance_accessor: true, default: nil, &blk)
    location = caller_locations(1, 1).first
    mattr_reader(*syms, instance_reader: instance_reader, instance_accessor: instance_accessor, default: default, location: location, &blk)
    mattr_writer(*syms, instance_writer: instance_writer, instance_accessor: instance_accessor, default: default, location: location)
  endmattr_reader(*syms, instance_reader: true, instance_accessor: true, default: nil, location: nil)
Defines a class attribute and creates a class and instance reader methods. The underlying class variable is set to nil, if it is not previously defined. All class and instance methods created will be public, even if this method is called with a private or protected access modifier.
module HairColors
  mattr_reader :hair_colors
end
HairColors.hair_colors # => nil
HairColors.class_variable_set("@@hair_colors", [:brown, :black])
HairColors.hair_colors # => [:brown, :black]
The attribute name must be a valid method name in Ruby.
module Foo
  mattr_reader :"1_Badname"
end
# => NameError: invalid attribute name: 1_Badname
To omit the instance reader method, pass instance_reader: false or instance_accessor: false.
module HairColors
  mattr_reader :hair_colors, instance_reader: false
end
class Person
  include HairColors
end
Person.new.hair_colors # => NoMethodError
You can set a default value for the attribute.
module HairColors
  mattr_reader :hair_colors, default: [:brown, :black, :blonde, :red]
end
class Person
  include HairColors
end
Person.new.hair_colors # => [:brown, :black, :blonde, :red]
📝 Source code
# File activesupport/lib/active_support/core_ext/module/attribute_accessors.rb, line 51
  def mattr_reader(*syms, instance_reader: true, instance_accessor: true, default: nil, location: nil)
    raise TypeError, "module attributes should be defined directly on class, not singleton" if singleton_class?
    location ||= caller_locations(1, 1).first
    definition = []
    syms.each do |sym|
      raise NameError.new("invalid attribute name: #{sym}") unless /\A[_A-Za-z]\w*\z/.match?(sym)
      definition << "def self.#{sym}; @@#{sym}; end"
      if instance_reader && instance_accessor
        definition << "def #{sym}; @@#{sym}; end"
      end
      sym_default_value = (block_given? && default.nil?) ? yield : default
      class_variable_set("@@#{sym}", sym_default_value) unless sym_default_value.nil? && class_variable_defined?("@@#{sym}")
    end
    module_eval(definition.join(";"), location.path, location.lineno)
  endmattr_writer(*syms, instance_writer: true, instance_accessor: true, default: nil, location: nil)
Defines a class attribute and creates a class and instance writer methods to allow assignment to the attribute. All class and instance methods created will be public, even if this method is called with a private or protected access modifier.
module HairColors
  mattr_writer :hair_colors
end
class Person
  include HairColors
end
HairColors.hair_colors = [:brown, :black]
Person.class_variable_get("@@hair_colors") # => [:brown, :black]
Person.new.hair_colors = [:blonde, :red]
HairColors.class_variable_get("@@hair_colors") # => [:blonde, :red]
To omit the instance writer method, pass instance_writer: false or instance_accessor: false.
module HairColors
  mattr_writer :hair_colors, instance_writer: false
end
class Person
  include HairColors
end
Person.new.hair_colors = [:blonde, :red] # => NoMethodError
You can set a default value for the attribute.
module HairColors
  mattr_writer :hair_colors, default: [:brown, :black, :blonde, :red]
end
class Person
  include HairColors
end
Person.class_variable_get("@@hair_colors") # => [:brown, :black, :blonde, :red]
📝 Source code
# File activesupport/lib/active_support/core_ext/module/attribute_accessors.rb, line 115
  def mattr_writer(*syms, instance_writer: true, instance_accessor: true, default: nil, location: nil)
    raise TypeError, "module attributes should be defined directly on class, not singleton" if singleton_class?
    location ||= caller_locations(1, 1).first
    definition = []
    syms.each do |sym|
      raise NameError.new("invalid attribute name: #{sym}") unless /\A[_A-Za-z]\w*\z/.match?(sym)
      definition << "def self.#{sym}=(val); @@#{sym} = val; end"
      if instance_writer && instance_accessor
        definition << "def #{sym}=(val); @@#{sym} = val; end"
      end
      sym_default_value = (block_given? && default.nil?) ? yield : default
      class_variable_set("@@#{sym}", sym_default_value) unless sym_default_value.nil? && class_variable_defined?("@@#{sym}")
    end
    module_eval(definition.join(";"), location.path, location.lineno)
  endmodule_parent()
Returns the module which contains this one according to its name.
module M
  module N
  end
end
X = M::N
M::N.module_parent # => M
X.module_parent    # => M
The parent of top-level and anonymous modules is Object.
M.module_parent          # => Object
Module.new.module_parent # => Object
📝 Source code
# File activesupport/lib/active_support/core_ext/module/introspection.rb, line 35
  def module_parent
    module_parent_name ? ActiveSupport::Inflector.constantize(module_parent_name) : Object
  endmodule_parent_name()
Returns the name of the module containing this one.
M::N.module_parent_name # => "M"
📝 Source code
# File activesupport/lib/active_support/core_ext/module/introspection.rb, line 10
  def module_parent_name
    if defined?(@parent_name)
      @parent_name
    else
      parent_name = name =~ /::[^:]+\z/ ? -$` : nil
      @parent_name = parent_name unless frozen?
      parent_name
    end
  endmodule_parents()
Returns all the parents of this module according to its name, ordered from nested outwards. The receiver is not contained within the result.
module M
  module N
  end
end
X = M::N
M.module_parents    # => [Object]
M::N.module_parents # => [M, Object]
X.module_parents    # => [M, Object]
📝 Source code
# File activesupport/lib/active_support/core_ext/module/introspection.rb, line 51
  def module_parents
    parents = []
    if module_parent_name
      parts = module_parent_name.split("::")
      until parts.empty?
        parents << ActiveSupport::Inflector.constantize(parts * "::")
        parts.pop
      end
    end
    parents << Object unless parents.include? Object
    parents
  endredefine_method(method, &block)
Replaces the existing method definition, if there is one, with the passed block as its body.
📝 Source code
# File activesupport/lib/active_support/core_ext/module/redefine_method.rb, line 17
  def redefine_method(method, &block)
    visibility = method_visibility(method)
    silence_redefinition_of_method(method)
    define_method(method, &block)
    send(visibility, method)
  endredefine_singleton_method(method, &block)
Replaces the existing singleton method definition, if there is one, with the passed block as its body.
📝 Source code
# File activesupport/lib/active_support/core_ext/module/redefine_method.rb, line 26
  def redefine_singleton_method(method, &block)
    singleton_class.redefine_method(method, &block)
  endremove_possible_method(method)
Removes the named method, if it exists.
📝 Source code
# File activesupport/lib/active_support/core_ext/module/remove_method.rb, line 7
  def remove_possible_method(method)
    if method_defined?(method) || private_method_defined?(method)
      undef_method(method)
    end
  endremove_possible_singleton_method(method)
Removes the named singleton method, if it exists.
📝 Source code
# File activesupport/lib/active_support/core_ext/module/remove_method.rb, line 14
  def remove_possible_singleton_method(method)
    singleton_class.remove_possible_method(method)
  endsilence_redefinition_of_method(method)
Marks the named method as intended to be redefined, if it exists. Suppresses the Ruby method redefinition warning. Prefer redefine_method where possible.
📝 Source code
# File activesupport/lib/active_support/core_ext/module/redefine_method.rb, line 7
  def silence_redefinition_of_method(method)
    if method_defined?(method) || private_method_defined?(method)
      # This suppresses the "method redefined" warning; the self-alias
      # looks odd, but means we don't need to generate a unique name
      alias_method method, method
    end
  endthread_cattr_accessor(*syms, instance_reader: true, instance_writer: true, instance_accessor: true, default: nil)
thread_mattr_accessor(*syms, instance_reader: true, instance_writer: true, instance_accessor: true, default: nil)
Defines both class and instance accessors for class attributes.
class Account
  thread_mattr_accessor :user
end
Account.user = "DHH"
Account.user     # => "DHH"
Account.new.user # => "DHH"
If a subclass changes the value, the parent class' value is not changed. Similarly, if the parent class changes the value, the value of subclasses is not changed.
class Customer < Account
end
Customer.user = "Rafael"
Customer.user # => "Rafael"
Account.user  # => "DHH"
To omit the instance writer method, pass instance_writer: false. To omit the instance reader method, pass instance_reader: false.
class Current
  thread_mattr_accessor :user, instance_writer: false, instance_reader: false
end
Current.new.user = "DHH"  # => NoMethodError
Current.new.user          # => NoMethodError
Or pass instance_accessor: false, to omit both instance methods.
class Current
  thread_mattr_accessor :user, instance_accessor: false
end
Current.new.user = "DHH"  # => NoMethodError
Current.new.user          # => NoMethodError
📝 Source code
# File activesupport/lib/active_support/core_ext/module/attribute_accessors_per_thread.rb, line 143
  def thread_mattr_accessor(*syms, instance_reader: true, instance_writer: true, instance_accessor: true, default: nil)
    thread_mattr_reader(*syms, instance_reader: instance_reader, instance_accessor: instance_accessor, default: default)
    thread_mattr_writer(*syms, instance_writer: instance_writer, instance_accessor: instance_accessor)
  end