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Modules and Mixins
= Modules and Mixins =
1 Regular Expressions
1 Regular Expressions
1.1 Definition
1.1 Definition

Revision as of 03:29, 3 October 2012

= Modules and Mixins = 

1 Regular Expressions 1.1 Definition 1.2 Regexp objects 1.3 Replace 1.4 Search 1.5 List of commonly used Regular expressions 2 Modules and Mixins 2.1 Modules 2.1.1 Definition 2.1.2 How Modules differ from classes? 2.1.3 Uses of modules 2.1.4 Example 2.2 Mixins 2.2.1 Definition 2.2.2 How mixins is different from #include and multiple inheritance? 2.2.3 Example 2.3 Similar functionality in other OO languages 2.3.1 Namespace in C++ (similar to modules) 2.3.1.1 Definition 2.3.1.2 Steps involved 2.3.1.3 Example 2.3.2 Multiple Inheritance (C++ only) (similar to mixins) 2.3.2.1 Definition 2.3.2.2. Example 2.3.3 Interface (Java) (similar to mixins) 2.3.3.1 Definition 2.3.3.2 Properties of Interface: 2.3.3.3 Example 3 Comparable 3.1 Definition 3.2 Example 3.3 Spaceship operator

4 Enumerable 4.1 Definition 4.2 Example

5. Simulating Multiple Inheritance 5.1 Example 5.2 Advantages of Multiple Inheritance 5.3 Disadvantages of Multiple Inheritance 5.3.1 Resolution of Name conflicts or Collisions 5.3.1.1 Compound selectors in Ruby 5.3.1.2. Renaming in Eiffel 6. Specifying Objects 6.1 Comparison between Set based language and Protocol based language 6.2 Inheritance in Set based language - object specification 6.2.1 Example: 6.3 Inheritance in Protocol based language - object specification 6.3.1 Example: 7. Extending specific objects 7.1 Ruby as a set-based language 7.2 Ruby as a prototype-based language 8 References 9 External Links 10 See Also

1 Regular Expressions

1.1 Definition

• Regular expressions are extremely powerful.Ruby was built as a better Perl hence it supports regular expressions. • Regular expression is sort of a string used to match to other strings.In ruby regular expressions are written in the format /pattern/modifiers where pattern is the regular expression and modifiers are the series of characters specifying the various options. • To understand the power of regular expressions here is an example.

1.2 Regexp objects

• In Ruby there is "Regexp" which is a Ruby object representing a Regular expression.Creating a Regexp object is similar to creating a string except for the usage of a forward slash to delimit it,rather than quote marks. r = /my regular expression/


1.3 Replace

• In the following example the character 'c' is replaced with "". "faculty".sub(/c/, "") >> "faulty"

1.4 Search

• The regular expressions will match the string "my regular expression" anywhere in the string.Let's look at what we can put into regular expressions using Regexp. Here's an example to retrieve the first match of /w.ll/ in the string. string1="I will drill for a well for you" => "I will drill for a well for you" r=Regexp.new(/w.ll/) => /w.ll/ r.match(string1) => #<MatchData "will">

Suppose you want to retrieve the first digit in a string.Here's an example:

e4=Regexp.new('\d') => /\d/ string="hello12 123" => "hello12 123" e4.match(string) => #<MatchData "1">

The above example since \d matches only digits it selects the 1 from Hello12.In order to retrieve the digits"12" from "hello12" we need to use \w which recognizes all word character[0-9A-Z a-z_] .Here's an example showing it.

e4=Regexp.new('\d\w*') => /\d\w*/ e4.match(string) => #<MatchData "12">

1.5 List of commonly used Regular expressions

The table below represents some special characters and their meaning in the patterns.

Regex- Character Meaning (...) Capture everything enclosed (a|b) a or b a? Zero or one of a a* Zero or more of a a+ One or more of a a{3} Exactly 3 of a a{3,} 3 or more of a a{3,6} Between 3 and 6 of a . Any single character \s Any whitespace character \S Any non-whitespace character \d Any digit \D Any non-digit \w Any word character (letter, number, underscore) \W Any non-word character \b Any word boundary [abc] A single character of: a, b or c [^abc] Any single character except: a, b, or c [a-z] Any single character in the range a-z [a-zA-Z] Any single character in the range a-z or A-Z ^ Start of line $ End of line \A Start of string \z End of string options: i case insensitive m make dot match newlines x ignore whitespace in regex o perform #{...} substitutions only once

More Examples

Example Description /([Rr])uby&\1ails/ Match ruby&rails or Ruby&Rails /(['"])(?:(?!\1).)*\1/ Single or double-quoted string. \1 matches whatever the 1st group matched . \2 matches whatever the 2nd group matched, etc.

Example Description /^Ruby/ Match "Ruby" at the start of a string or internal line /Ruby$/ Match "Ruby" at the end of a string or line /\ARuby/ Match "Ruby" at the start of a string /Ruby\Z/ Match "Ruby" at the end of a string /\bRuby\b/ Match "Ruby" at a word boundary /\brub\B/ \B is nonword boundary: match "rub" in "rube" and "ruby" but not alone /Ruby(?=!)/ Match "Ruby", if followed by an exclamation point /Ruby(?!!)/ Match "Ruby", if not followed by an exclamation point

Example line1 = "Cats are smarter than dogs"; line2 = "Dogs also like meat"; if ( line1 =~ /Cats(.*)/ )

 puts "Line1 starts with Cats"

end if ( line2 =~ /Cats(.*)/ )

 puts "Line2 starts with Dogs"

end

This will produce following result: Line1 starts with Cats

Example text = "rails are rails, really good Ruby on Rails"

  1. Change "rails" to "Rails" throughout

text.gsub!("rails", "Rails")

  1. Capitalize the word "Rails" throughout

text.gsub!(/\brails\b/, "Rails") puts "#{text}" This will produce following result: Rails are Rails, really good Ruby on Rails

2 Modules and Mixins

2.1 Modules

2.1.1 Definition

• Ruby Modules are similar to classes in that they hold a collection of methods,constants and other module and class definitions. • Modules definition is similar to classes just that we use the keyword module instead of the class keyword.

2.1.2 How Modules differ from classes?

Unlike classes, objects cannot be created based on modules nor can it be sub classed.However, it can be specified that the functionality of one module should be added to another class, or a specific object.

2.1.3 Uses of modules

Modules serve two purpose: 1.They act as namespace in C++, letting definition of methods whose names will not clash with those defined elsewhere. 2.Modules allow to share functionality between classes.

2.1.4 Example

• Here's an example taken from class notes Class notes of CSC517, NCSU to illustrate modules. • Suppose there is a graphics library that contains classes for Windows(windows.rb) and Border(border.rb).Window.rb and border.rb have a top method,which gives the position of the top of the Windows and top of the border respectively. • To layout windows with borders,both windows.rb and border.rb have to be loaded into the program.However, as the top method is in both classes one of them will be overridden. • The solution to this is use of modules. The window function and border function can go into separate modules respectively. module Window def Window.top

  1. ..

end def Window.bottom

  1. ..

end end

module Border def Border.top

  1. ...

end def Border.width

  1. ..

end end

When a program needs to use these modules, it can simply load the two files using the Ruby require statement, and reference the qualified names.


require 'window' require 'border' trueTop = Window.top + Border.Top.

2.2 Mixins

2.2.1 Definition

• The most interesting fact about the use of modules is to define mixins. When a module is included within a class,all its functionality becomes available to the class. • Modules can contain class methods and instance methods.

2.2.2 How mixins is different from #include and multiple inheritance?

• Let's see how mixins is contrasting to #include and multiple inheritance in other languages.#include files define methods that can be called but not applied to objects. • By using mixins the same methods can be added to any number of different classes;regardless of hierarchy. • Mixins corresponds to the usage of interfaces in Java.

2.2.3 Example

Consider the following example taken from class notes Class notes of CSC517, NCSU to illustrate mixins.


module Introspect

 def kind 
   puts "#{self.class.name}" 
 end 

end class Animal

 include Introspect 
 def initialize(name) 
    @name = name 
 end 

end class Car

 include Introspect 
 def initialize(model) 
   @model = model 
 end 

end d = Animal.new("Cat") c = Car.new("Ferrari") d.kind # kind method is available through … c.kind # .. the mixin Introspect >>Animal >>Car

Consider another example to understand mixins better.


module Persistence

 def load sFileName
  puts "load code to read #{sFileName} contents into my_data"
 end
def save sFileName
 puts "Uber code to persist #{@my_data} to #{sFileName}"
end
def kind
 puts "#{self.class.name}"
end

end

class BrandNewClass

   include Persistence
   attr :my_data
       def data=(someData)
       @my_data = someData
   end

end

b = BrandNewClass.new b.data = "My pwd" b.save "MyFile.secret" Uber code to persist My pwd to MyFile.secret

b.kind >>BrandNewClass


2.3 Similar functionality in other OO languages 2.3.1 Namespace in C++ (similar to modules)

2.3.1.1 Definition • In general, a namespace is a container for a set of identifiers (names), and allows the disambiguation of homonym identifiers residing in different namespaces. • Namespaces usually group names based on their functionality.

2.3.1.2 Steps involved To use C++ namespaces, there are two steps involved: • To uniquely identify a namespace with the keyword namespace. • To access the elements of an identified namespace by applying the using keyword.

2.3.1.3 Example 

namespace NewOne {

     int p;
     long q

} • p and q are normal variables but integrated within the NewOne namespace. • In order to access this variables from the outside the namespace, we have to use the scope operator ::. • From previous example: NewOne::p; NewOne::q;

A namespace definition can be nested within another namespace definition. Every namespace definition must appear either at file scope or immediately within another namespace definition. For example:

// a namespace with using directive

  1. include <iostream>

using namespace std; namespace SampleOne {

      float p = 10.34;

}

namespace SampleTwo {

      using namespace SampleOne;
      float q = 77.12;
      namespace InSampleTwo
      {
             float r = 34.725;
      }

}

int main() {

      // this directive gives you everything declared in SampleTwo
      using namespace SampleTwo;
      // this directive gives you only InSampleTwo
      using namespace SampleTwo::InSampleTwo;
      // local declaration, take precedence
      float p = 23.11;

      cout<<"p = "<<p<<endl;
      cout<<"q = "<<q<<endl;
      cout<<"r = "<<r<<endl;
      return 0;

}


2.3.2 Multiple inheritance (C++ only) (similar to mixins) 2.3.2.1 Definition You can derive a class from any number of base classes. Deriving a class from more than one direct base class is called multiple inheritance. 2.3.2.2. Example In the following example, classes A, B, and C are direct base classes for the derived class X: class A { /* ... */ }; class B { /* ... */ }; class C { /* ... */ }; class X : public A, private B, public C { /* ... */ }; The following inheritance graph describes the inheritance relationships of the above example. An arrow points to the direct base class of the class at the tail of the arrow:

The order of derivation is relevant only to determine the order of default initialization by constructors and cleanup by destructors. A direct base class cannot appear in the base list of a derived class more than once: class B1 { /* ... */ }; // direct base class class D : public B1, private B1 { /* ... */ }; // error However, a derived class can inherit an indirect base class more than once, as shown in the following example:

class L { /* ... */ }; // indirect base class class B2 : public L { /* ... */ }; class B3 : public L { /* ... */ }; class D : public B2, public B3 { /* ... */ }; // valid • In the above example, class D inherits the indirect base class L once through class B2 and once through class B3. • However, this may lead to ambiguities because two subobjects of class L exist, and both are accessible through class D. • You can avoid this ambiguity by referring to class L using a qualified class name. For example: B2::L or B3::L. You can also avoid this ambiguity by using the base specifier virtual to declare a base class, as described in Derivation (C++ only). 2.3.3 Interface (Java) (similar to mixins) 2.3.3.1 Definition • A Java interface defines a set of methods but does not implement them. • A class that implements the interface agrees to implement all of the methods defined in the interface, thereby agreeing to certain behavior, thereby implementing multiple inheritance. 2.3.3.2 Properties of Interface: • An interface is implicitly abstract. You do not need to use the abstract keyword when declaring an interface. • Each method in an interface is also implicitly abstract, so the abstract keyword is not needed. • Methods in an interface are implicitly public. 2.3.3.3 Example • When a class implements an interface, you can think of the class as signing a contract, agreeing to perform the specific behaviors of the interface. • If a class does not perform all the behaviors of the interface, the class must declare itself as abstract. /* File name : Animal.java */ interface Animal {

public void eat(); public void travel(); }

• Aclass uses the implements keyword to implement an interface. The implements keyword appears in the class declaration following the extends portion of the declaration. /* File name : MammalInt.java */ public class MammalInt implements Animal{

  public void eat(){
     System.out.println("Mammal eats");
  }
  public void travel(){
     System.out.println("Mammal travels");
  } 
  public int noOfLegs(){
     return 0;
  }
  public static void main(String args[]){
     MammalInt m = new MammalInt();
     m.eat();
     m.travel();
  }

} This would produce following result: Mammal eats Mammal travels


3 Comparable

3.1 Definition

• The comparable mixin is used by classes whose objects may be ordered. • The class must define the <=> operator, which compares the receiver against another object,returning -1,0 or +1 depending on whether the receiver is less than,equal to ,or greater than the other object. • If the other object is not comparable then is should just return nil.Comparable uses <=> to implement the comparison operators(<,<=,==,=>,and >) and the method between?.

3.2 Example

Here is an example taken from class notes Class notes of CSC517, NCSU to illustrate comparable mixin.

class Line

 def initialize(x1, y1, x2, y2) 
   @x1, @y1, @x2, @y2 = x1, y1, x2, y2 
 end   

end

We compare two lines on the basis of their lengths. We add the Comparable mixin as follows:

class Line

 include Comparable  
 def length_squared 
   (@x2-@x1) * (@x2-@x1) + (@y2-@y1) * (@y2-@y1)

end def <=>(other)

   self.length_squared <=> other.length_squared 
 end 

end


3.3 Spaceship operator

• <=> returns 1,0, or –1, depending on whether the first argument is greater than, equal to, or less than the second argument. • We delegate the call to <=> of the Fixnum class, which compares the squares of the lengths. Now we can use the Comparable methods on Line objects:


l1 = Line.new(1, 0, 4, 3) l2 = Line.new(0, 0, 10, 10) puts l1.length_squared if l1 < l2

 puts "Line 1 is shorter than Line 2" 

else if l1 > l2

 puts "Line 1 is longer than Line 2" 

else

 puts "Line 1 is just as long as Line 2" 
end 

end >>Line 1 is shorter than Line 2

4 Enumerable

4.1 Definition

Enumerable is a standard mixin which can be used to put into other classes.It has a method called inject that can be applied to adjacent elements of a set.

4.2 Example

Consider the following example.

[1, 2, 3, 4, 5 ,6].inject {|v, n| v+n } >>21

• As seen in the above example inject is used on all elements of the set to add them and display the result. • To understand the working of Enumerable mixin in class,consider the following example taken from class notes Class notes of CSC517, NCSU. The class VowelFinder returns successive vowels in a string using the Enumerable mixin method.


class VowelFinder

 include Enumerable 
 def initialize(string) 
   @string = string 
 end 
 def each 
   @string.scan(/[aeiou]/) do |vowel| 
     yield vowel 
   end 
 end 

end


VowelFinder.new("abacadabra").inject {|v, n| v+n} >>aaaaa

5. Simulating Multiple Inheritance

• Multiple Inheritance has several disadvantages that can lead to ambiguous code behavior either during compile time or run time. • Ruby does not support direct Multiple Inheritance. But, Multiple Inheritance can be achieved in Ruby through Modules. Modules simulate multiple inheritance in Ruby. • Given below is the Taggable-string example taken from the Class notes of CSC517, NCSU. Suppose we want to add tags to Strings, we can define a Taggable module and include it into the class.

5.1 Example

require 'set'      # A collection of unordered values with no duplicates

module Taggable
  attr_accessor :tags
  
  def taggable_setup
    @tags = Set.new
  end
  
  def add_tag(tag)
    @tags << tag
  end
  
  def remove_tag(tag)
    @tags.delete(tag)
  end
end

class TaggableString < String
  include Taggable
  def initialize(*args)
    super
    taggable_setup
  end
end

s = TaggableString.new('It is a bright, it is a sunny day')
s.add_tag 'sentence'
s.add_tag 'quotation'
s.tags                          # =>    #<Set: {"sentence", "quotation"}>

Given below is another simple example of how modules and mixins can be used to simulate multiple inheritance in Ruby.

module A
  def a1
    puts "Inside a1"
  end
  def a2
    puts "Inside a2"
  end
end

module B
   def b1
     puts "Inside b1"
   end
   def b2
     puts "Inside b2"
   end
end

class Sample
  include A
  include B
  def s1
    puts "Inside s1"
  end
end

obj = Sample.new
obj.a1             # => Inside a1
obj.a2             # => Inside a2
obj.b1             # => Inside b1
obj.b2             # => Inside b2
obj.s1             # => Inside s1

5.2 Advantages of Multiple Inheritance

Although multiple inheritance has its disadvantages, there are a couple of good reasons for using multiple inheritance. Generally, multiple inheritance is used in one of the following ways:

1. Multiple Independant Protocols • This is used when a class has to have features of independant classes. A class is created by inheriting or combining two or more completely different super-classes. • For example, in Eiffel, the library class WINDOW is a subclass of SCREENMAN, RECTANGLE, and TWO_WAY_TREE.

Example: Our classification of objects in everyday life is naturally hierarchical. We know that all cats are mammals, and all mammals are animals. Smaller classes inherit characteristics from the larger classes to which they belong. If all mammals breathe, then all cats breathe.

class Mammal def breathe puts "inhale and exhale" end end

class Cat<Mammal def speak puts "Meow" end end

tama = Cat.new

tama.breathe >> inhale and exhale

tama.speak >> Meow


2. Mix and Match • This is used when a class need to created as a combination of different super-classes. Several classes are created specially for subsequent combination. • There is a mix and match of super-classes combined into a single sub-class. For example, Mixins help achieve this.

Example module A

 def a1
   puts "Module A method a1"
 end
 def a2
   puts "Module A method a2"
 end

end module B

 def b1
   puts "Module B method b1"
 end
 def b2
   puts "Module B method b2"
 end

end

class Sample

 include A
 include B
 def s1
   puts "Class method s1"
 end

end

samp=Sample.new samp.a1 samp.a2 samp.b1 samp.b2 samp.s1 >> Module A method a1 Module A method a2 Module B method b1 Module B method b2 Class method s1

3. Submodularity • Modularity of the sub-parts of the classes is noticed and factored out into subclasses. • This is used when the super-classes are modular and the modularity has to be factored out into subclasses. For example, in a class representing Interest rates, one might factor out FIXED_RATE and VARYING Interest rates.

Example class Calc

 def initialize x,y
   @x=x
   @y=y
 end
 def result

puts "product #{Product.result(@x,@y)}" puts "Sum #{Sum.result(@x,@y)}"

 end

end class Product

 def Product.result x,y
   x*y
 end

end class Sum

 def Sum.result x,y
   x+y
 end

end a= Calc.new 3,4 a.result >> product 12 Sum 7

4. Separation of interface and implementation • Interfaces are defined by Abstract Classes. Interfaces contain a group of related method declarations. • The methods are not defined in the Interfaces. Interfaces represents the super-class and the sub-classes inherit the interfaces by implementing the interfaces. • In other words, the subclasses encapsulate the implementation details of the interface. • For example, a Stack class could be created as a subclass of StackInterface and StackImplementation. • In ruby Separation of interface and implementation is implemented as shown below. Example: class Shape

 def draw
   raise NotImplementedError.new(
             "Method not implemented")
 end

end class Square < Shape

 def draw
   puts "abstract method"
 end

end

s = Square.new.draw >> abstract method

5.3 Disadvantages of Multiple Inheritance

• Programmers use multiple inheritance to increase reusability and consistency in the system. • Although multiple inheritance is useful, it can lead to ambiguity and increased complexity if not used carefully. For this reason, some languages like Java, Ruby etc., do not support direct multiple inheritance. • They provide different ways to achieve multiple inheritance like Interfaces, Mixins etc. The problems that arise due to multiple inheritance are as follows:

1. Name collision

• Two features (instance variables or methods) with the same name are inherited from different super-classes. • The super-classes may be correct and consistent. • But the conflict arises when the sub-class inherit the two super-classes which have methods of the same name (for example, initialize()). • Some people call this situation the "Deadly Diamond of Death". This is illustrated by the Java code example below:

// This is our top most abstract class.
class AbstractSuperClass{
  abstract void method();
}

// These are the two concrete sub classes which extend the above super class
class ConcreteSubOne extends AbstractSuperClass{
  void method(){
    System.out.println("I am going to test multiple Inheritance");
  }
}

class ConcreteSubTwo extends AbstractSuperClass{
  void method(){
    System.out.println("I will cause the Deadly Diamond of Death");
  }
}
// This is our last class which extends both of the above concrete classes
class DeadlyDiamondEffect extends ConcreteSubOne, ConcreteSubTwo{
  //Some methods of this class
  //This inherits a do() method from ConcreteSubOne and another do() from ConcreteSubTwo. When this is called there is an ambiguity.
}

2. Repeated inheritance

• Multiple inheritance may result in a sub-class inheriting the same super-class more than once. • Since there are multiple paths from the sub-class to its ancestor classes, a class can by mistake, end up inhering the same super-class more than once. This can go unnoticed and lead to ambiguity and increase the chances of errors. It is very difficult to trace the errors as well. Example module A

 def a1
   puts "Module A method a1"
 end
 def a2
   puts "Module A method a2"
 end

end

class A1

 include A
 def a1
   puts "Module A1 method a1"
 end
 def a2
   puts "Module A1 method a2"
 end

end

class Sample < A1

 include A
 def s1
   puts "Class method s1"
 end

end

Here Sample class uses / mixes unnecessarily repeatedly methods of module A


3. Method combination

• This problem is similar to the name collision issue discussed above. • An object may need to execute a method (for example, initialize()) which has been defined in different super-classes. • The method resolution becomes a problem during compile time and can lead to run-time errors. Example Consider the example TeachingAssistant example of multiple inheritance discussed in csc517 class. Even though the program works fine, consider the situation when, user wants to access to_s method of person / student fter declaring to_s in teaching_assistant class?!

module Person

 attr_accessor :name
 attr_accessor :height
 attr_accessor :weight
 def to_s
   "Person[" + @name + ", height = " + @height + ", weight =" + weight + "]"
 end

end

module Student

 include Person
 attr_accessor :major
 attr_accessor :hometown
 def to_s
   "Student[" + @name + ", height = " + @height + 
   ", weight = " + weight + ", major = " + major + 
   ", hometown = " + hometown + "]"
   end

end

module Employee

 attr_accessor :title
 attr_accessor :wage
 include Person
 def to_s
   "Employee[" + @name + ", height = " + @height + 
   ", weight = " + weight + ", title = " + title + 
   ", wage = " + wage+ "]"
  end

end

class TeachingAssistant include Student include Employee

 def to_s
   "TeachingAssistant[" + @name + ", height = " + @height + 
   ", weight = " + weight + ", \n   major = " + major + 
   ", hometown = " + hometown + ", title = " + title + 
   ", wage = " + wage + "]"
  end

end

john = TeachingAssistant.new(); john.name = "John" john.height = "6 ft. 2 in." john.weight = "180 lbs." john.major = "CS" john.hometown = "Springfield" john.title = "busboy" john.wage = "$7.25/hr." john.to_s


4. Implementation difficulties

• Multiple inheritance can result in increased code complexity and implementation difficulties. • In multiple inheritance classes can be combined in several different ways. It becomes difficult for the programmer to represent different objects. • Finding methods needs a lot of search or redirection along the hierarchy.

Consider the below situation where class E inherits A through B C D, if E wishes to access methods of A, which route will class E follow to inherit the methods of A?


5. Misuse

• Multiple inheritance provides the ability to a sub-class to inherit from a parent class as many times as it wants. Also, a sub-class can inherit from as many parent classes as it wants. • Therefore, there is a chance that inheritance is used more often than is needed unnecessarily. • For example, consider a new ApplePie class which has to inherit features from Apple class and Cinnamon class. Programmers may consider this multiple inheritance because ApplePie contains Apple and Cinnamon. But, this is not the right way. Whenever a class wants to inherit another class, there should be a "is-a" relationship between the sub-class and super-class. Here, there is a "has-a" relation and not "is-a" relationship. • ApplePie has-a Apple • ApplePie has-a Cinnamon • The relationship can be a object composition but not inheritance. • "Is-a" relationship does not exist. The thumb rule to check if inheritance is allowed is to verify the "is-a" relationship.

5.3.1 Resolution of Name conflicts or Collisions

Multiple inheritance may cause name conflicts when a sub-class inherits different super-classes that contain the methods or variables with the same name. This can be resolved in many ways.

5.3.1.1 Compound selectors in Ruby

Suppose a class Sub inherits two different methods for MethodOne from two different super-classes, SuperClassOne and SuperClassTwo. In Ruby, we can use Compound Selectors to refer to the method as shown below:

SuperClassOne.MethodOne      #Uses the MethodOne method inherited from SuperClassOne
SuperClassTwo.MethodOne      #Uses the MethodOne method inherited from SuperClassTwo

5.3.1.2. Renaming in Eiffel

In Eiffel language, naming conflicts are overcome in inherited features by renaming. It contains a rename clause to remove name conflicts. This is illustrated below:

Class Sub inherit
  SuperClassOne rename x as x1, y as y1;
  SuperClassTwo rename x as x2, y as y2;
  feature....

Here, the inherit clause would be illegal without the rename clause. This ensures that name conflicts are resolved. This also allows the programmer to give meaningful and appropriate names to the inherited features.


6. Specifying Objects The Object-Oriented programming paradigm has two ways for specifying objects.

Set based language - object specification Protocol based language - object specification

6.1 Comparison between Set based language and Protocol based language

Let us compare and contrast between Set based language - object specification and Protocol based language - object specification

Set based language - object specification Protocol based language - object specification First, a class is described which abstracts the features or properties of the object we want to specify. First, an object that is a concrete representation of the object we are trying to specify is created. This is the prototype. After describing the template or class, instances or objects for that class are created to perform the actual work. Classes can be described by Meta-classes. Multiple instances of that object are obtained by copying or cloning. Every object instance for a class is unique and holds its internal values for all the features defined for that class. Each and every instance has those properties and internal values that are specific and unique to itself and a reference to its prototype, called an extension. Essentially, there is no distinction between an instance and a prototype. Any instance can be copied or cloned to become the prototypical object for its duplicates.


6.2 Inheritance in Set based language - object specification

• When the object that receives a message to perform some action, if it does not understand, it consults its ancestor classes asking each of them to handle the message along the inheritance hierarchy.

6.2.1 Example:

• In a set-based object specification system, the objects are defined using a top-down approach by first specifying the abstract and using that abstract to create the specific.

• To describe a car object, we collect properties that are common to all the cars and create a car class that represents all cars and contains features that all cars should have.

• Then we use that car class to create new car objects or instances.


6.3 Inheritance in Protocol based language - object specification

• When an object receives a message, if it does not understand the message, the message is delegated to its prototypes asking each one of them to grant it the ability to handle the message.

6.3.1 Example:

• In a prototype-based object specification system, the objects are defined using a bottom-up approach by first specifying the specific instance and modifying it as necessary to represent other instances.

• Consider the same car example. To describe a car Mercedes, we create an object first that contains its properties (Mercedes logo, black, sedan, fast).

• If we later discover a new car Lexus (Lexus logo, white), we specify what we know about Lexus and assume that the remainder in identical to the prototypical car Mercedes.

• This may evolve the assumption that all cars are sedans and fast.

7. Extending specific objects

7.1 Ruby as a set-based language

• Ruby can act as a set-based language. • We can first define classes that form the blueprint or a template. • We can then create instances for the classes. These objects contain internal values for the properties present in the class. • We can then perform inheritance and define sub-classes, modify or add more functionality and create instances for the sub-classes. • The sub-class objects receive messages. If they don't understand, they consult the ancestors in the inheritance hierarchy. • The include statement can be used to augment the class definition and add more functionality to the class.

7.2 Ruby as a prototype-based language

• Ruby can also act as a prototype-based language. This is where specific instances of the class, not all, will have some unique features and properties.

Extending Objects

• There is a way in Ruby, to add instance specific functionality to just specific instances/objects of a class by using the object#extend method. • This means, some objects of a class can have values for all the properties mentioned in the class, but a few others can have additional properties specific to them. This concept is called Extending Objects. • The example below, which is taken from the Class notes of CSC517, NCSU illustrates the concept of extending specific objects. • Consider a Person class which has properties for a mild-mannered people.

class Person
  attr_reader :name, :age, :occupation
  
  def initialize(name, age, occupation)
    @name, @age, @occupation = name, age, occupation
  end
  
  def mild_mannered?
    true
  end
end

Amy = Person.new('Amy Wilson', 23, 'student')
John = Person.new('John Mason', 40, 'professor')
Amy.mild_mannered?                                  # => true 
John.mild_mannered?                                 # => true


The above class describes all the people who are mild-mannered. What if there are some other people who are not as mild-mannered as they appear. That is they have some super-powers as well.

module SuperPowers
  def fly
    'Flying!'
  end
  
  def leap(what)
    "Leaping #{what} in a single bound!"
  end
  
  def mild_mannered?
    false
  end
  
  def superhero_name
    'Superman'
  end
end

Here, we have two situations. Some objects of the person class are mild-mannered, while some other objects of the same person class have super powers with them. Extending Objects - example • To achieve this, if we add super power functionality to the person class itself, then all the mild-mannered person objects will also ending having values for this property. • If we use include to mix the SuperPowers module into the Person class, it will give every person super powers. Some people are bound to misuse such power.

The only way to achieve this is to extend only those objects that have super powers instead of extending the entire class itself.

Amy.extend(SuperPowers)
puts Amy.superhero_name          # => Superman
puts Amy.fly                     # => Flying!
puts Amy.leap(rocks)             # => Leaping #{what} in a single bound!   
puts Amy.mild_mannered?          # => false             
puts John.mild_mannered?         # => true

Given below is another example that illustrates extending specific objects.

module CarAction
  def goLeft(steps)
    Movement.new(self, steps)
  end
end  


#The Actions module can be included to allow a class to generate movements.
class BigCar
  include CarAction
  def carMethod
    puts "This is a method inside BigCar class"
  end
end

#After CarActions is included goLeft can be executed by any instance of BigCar.
car1 = BigCar.new
car1.carMethod
movement1 = car1.goLeft


#The CarActions module is not included in the SmallCar class.
class SmallCar
  def carMethod
    puts "This is a method inside SmallCar class"
  end
end

#Extend adds the methods to one instance, not to all instances.
car2 = SmallCar.new
car2.extend CarActions
movement2 = car.goLeft

car3 = SmallCar.new
movement3 = car.goLeft      #Error: car3 does not extend CarActions, hence cannot call the goLeft method.

8 References Class notes of CSC517, NCSU [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] Multiple Inheritance [6] [7] http://www.informatics.susx.ac.uk/research/groups/nlp/datr/datrnode33.html http://csis.pace.edu/~bergin/patterns/multipleinheritance.html Deadly Diamond of Death http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diamond_problem Subclasses and Superclasses Mixins http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interface_%28Java%29 Object Composition Is-a relatioship http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eiffel_%28programming_language%29#Renaming http://ruby-doc.org/docs/ProgrammingRuby/html/ext_ruby.html http://rubular.com/ http://www.tutorialspoint.com/ruby/ruby_regular_expressions.htm http://www.tenouk.com/Module23.html http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interface_(Java) http://www.tutorialspoint.com/java/java_interfaces.htm http://publib.boulder.ibm.com/infocenter/comphelp/v8v101/index.jsp?topic=%2Fcom.ibm.xlcpp8a.doc%2Flanguage%2Fref%2Fcplr134.htm

9 External Links Compile time Run time http://wiki.answers.com/Q/What_are_the_advantages_of_single_inheritance_over_multiple_inheritance http://archive.eiffel.com/doc/manuals/technology/bmarticles/joop/multiple.html Ruby extend and Include Ruby Multiple Inheritance with modules and mixins http://download.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/java/IandI/abstract.html http://download.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/java/IandI/usinginterface.html Abstract types http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reusability 10 See Also http://www.ruby-lang.org/en/ http://www.ruby-lang.org/en/downloads/ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ruby_%28programming_language%29 http://rubyonrails.org/ Object oriented Programming Learn Ruby Functional programming Imperative Programming Interpreted language Reflection Dynamic language Python Perl Ruby on Rails Model View Controller - MVC Metaprogramming Ruby: Program Like the Ruby Pros Design Patterns in Ruby Garbage Collection in Ruby Threads in Ruby Ruby interface to C modules Currying