Object Inspector takes Object#inspect to the next level. Specify any combination of identification attributes, flags, issues, info, and/or a name along with an optional, self-definable scope option to represent objects. Great for the console, logging, etc.
Why? Because object inspection output should be uniform and easy to build, and its output should be easy to read! Consistency improves readability.
If you'd like to just jump into an example: Full Example.
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem "object_inspector"
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself:
$ gem install object_inspector
Tested MRI Ruby Versions:
- 3.2
- 3.3
- 3.4
For Ruby 2.7 support, install object_inspector gem version 0.6.3.
gem "object_inspector", "0.6.3"
For Ruby 3.1 support, install object_inspector gem version 0.7.0.
gem "object_inspector", "0.7.0"
Object Inspector has no other dependencies.
Global/default values for Object Inspector can be configured via the [ObjectInspector::Configuration] object.
# config/initializers/object_inspector.rb
# Default values are shown. Customize to your liking.
ObjectInspector.configure do |config|
config.formatter_class = ObjectInspector::TemplatingFormatter
config.inspect_method_prefix = "inspect"
config.default_scope = ObjectInspector::Scope.new(:self)
config.wild_card_scope = "all"
config.out_of_scope_placeholder = "*"
config.presenter_inspect_flags = " ⇨ "
config.name_separator = " - "
config.flags_separator = " / "
config.issues_separator = " | "
config.info_separator = " | "
end
Pass an object of any type into ObjectInspector::Inspector.inspect
.
class MyObject
def inspect
ObjectInspector::Inspector.inspect(self)
end
end
MyObject.new.inspect # => "<MyObject>"
See: Helper Usage for simpler usage.
Use the identification
, flags
, issues
, info
, and/or name
options to customize inspect output.
class MyObject
def inspect
ObjectInspector::Inspector.inspect(
self,
identification: "My Object",
flags: "FLAG1 / FLAG2",
issues: "ISSUE1",
info: "INFO",
name: "NAME")
end
end
MyObject.new.inspect
# => "<My Object(FLAG1 / FLAG2) !!ISSUE1!! INFO :: NAME>"
Or, define inspect_identification
, inspect_flags
, inspect_issues
, inspect_info
, and/or inspect_name
(or display_name
) as either public or private methods on Object.
class MyObject
def inspect
ObjectInspector::Inspector.inspect(self)
end
private
def inspect_identification = "My Object"
def inspect_flags = "FLAG1 / FLAG2"
def inspect_issues = "ISSUE1 | ISSUE2"
def inspect_info = "INFO"
def inspect_name = "NAME" # Or: def display_name = "NAME"
end
MyObject.new.inspect
# => "<My Object(FLAG1 / FLAG2) !!ISSUE1 | ISSUE2!! INFO :: NAME>"
To save some typing, include ObjectInspector::InspectHelper into an object and ObjectInspector::Inspector.inspect
will be called on self
automatically.
class MyObject
include ObjectInspector::InspectorsHelper
end
MyObject.new.inspect # => "<MyObject>"
To access the ObjectInspector::Inspector's options via the helper, call into super
.
class MyObject
include ObjectInspector::InspectorsHelper
def inspect
super(identification: "My Object",
flags: "FLAG1",
issues: "ISSUE1 | ISSUE2",
info: "INFO",
name: "NAME")
end
end
MyObject.new.inspect
# => "<My Object(FLAG1) !!ISSUE1 | ISSUE2!! INFO :: NAME>"
Or, define inspect_identification
, inspect_flags
, inspect_info
, and/or inspect_name
(or display_name
) in Object.
class MyObject
include ObjectInspector::InspectorsHelper
private
def inspect_identification = "My Object"
def inspect_flags = "FLAG1 / FLAG2"
def inspect_issues = "ISSUE1 | ISSUE2"
def inspect_info = "INFO"
def inspect_name = "NAME" # Or: def display_name = "NAME"
end
MyObject.new.inspect
# => "<My Object(FLAG1) !!ISSUE1 | ISSUE2!! INFO :: NAME>"
Use the scope
option to define the scope of the inspect_*
methods. The supplied value will be wrapped by the ObjectInspector::Scope helper object.
The default value is ObjectInspector::Scope.new(:self)
.
ObjectInspector::Scope acts like ActiveSupport::StringInquirer. This is a prettier way to test for a given type of "scope" within objects.
The ObjectInspector::Scope objects in these examples are the same as specifying <scope_name>
like this:
my_object.inspect(scope: <scope_name>)
Options:
:self
(Default)--Is meant to confine object interrogation to self (don't interrogate neighboring objects).:all
--Is meant to match on all scopes, regardless of their name.<custom>
--Anything else that makes sense for the object to key on.
scope = ObjectInspector::Scope.new
scope.self? # => true
scope.verbose? # => false
scope.complex? # => false
scope.<anything>? # => false
It is also possible to pass in multiple scope names to match on.
scope = ObjectInspector::Scope.new(%i[verbose complex])
scope.self? # => false
scope.verbose? # => true
scope.complex? # => true
Finally, :all
is a "wild card" scope name, and will match on all scope names.
scope = ObjectInspector::Scope.new(:all)
scope.self? # => true
scope.verbose? # => true
scope.complex? # => true
scope.all? # => true
Passing a block to a scope predicate falls back to the out-of-scope placeholder (*
by default) if the scope does not match.
scope = ObjectInspector::Scope.new(:verbose)
scope.verbose? { "MATCH" } # => "MATCH"
scope.complex? { "MATCH" } # => "*"
ObjectInspector::Scope also offers helper methods for uniformly joining inspect elements:
join_name # Joins name parts with ` - ` by default
join_flags # Joins flags with ` / ` by default
join_issues # Joins issues with ` | ` by default
join_info # Joins info items with ` | ` by default
For example:
scope = ObjectInspector::Scope.new(:all)
scope.join_name([1, 2, 3, nil]) # => "1 - 2 - 3"
scope.join_flags([1, 2, 3, nil]) # => "1 / 2 / 3"
scope.join_issues([1, 2, 3, nil]) # => "1 | 2 | 3"
scope.join_info([1, 2, 3, nil]) # => "1 | 2 | 3"
class MyObject
include ObjectInspector::InspectorsHelper
attr_reader :name,
:a2
def initialize(name, a2 = 2)
@name = name
@a2 = a2
end
def associated_object1
Data.define(:flags)["AO1_FLAG1"]
end
def associated_object2
Data.define(:flags)["AO2_FLAG1"]
end
# Or `def inspect_name`
def display_name(scope:)
name
end
private
def inspect_identification
identify(:a2)
end
def inspect_flags(scope:)
flags = ["DEFAULT_FLAG"]
flags <<
scope.verbose? {
[
associated_object1.flags,
associated_object2.flags,
]
}
scope.join_flags(flags)
end
def inspect_issues(scope:)
scope.join_issues([
"I1",
scope.verbose? { "VI2" },
])
end
def inspect_info(scope:)
info = ["Default Info"]
info << "Complex Info" if scope.complex?
info << scope.verbose? { "Verbose Info" }
scope.join_info(info)
end
end
my_object = MyObject.new("Name")
my_object.inspect
# => "<MyObject[2](DEFAULT_FLAG / *) !!I1 | *!! Default Info | * :: Name>"
my_object.inspect(scope: :self)
# => "<MyObject[2](DEFAULT_FLAG / *) !!I1 | *!! Default Info | * :: Name>"
my_object.inspect(scope: :complex)
# => "<MyObject[2](DEFAULT_FLAG / *) !!I1 | *!! Default Info | Complex Info | * :: Name>"
my_object.inspect(scope: :verbose)
# => "<MyObject[2](DEFAULT_FLAG / AO1_FLAG1 / AO2_FLAG1) !!I1 | VI2!! Default Info | Verbose Info :: Name>"
my_object.inspect(scope: %i[self complex verbose])
# => "<MyObject[2](DEFAULT_FLAG / AO1_FLAG1 / AO2_FLAG1) !!I1 | VI2!! Default Info | Complex Info | Verbose Info :: Name>"
my_object.inspect(scope: :all)
# => "<MyObject[2](DEFAULT_FLAG / AO1_FLAG1 / AO2_FLAG1) !!I1 | VI2!! Default Info | Complex Info | Verbose Info :: Name>"
ObjectInspector.configuration.default_scope = :complex
my_object.inspect
# => "<MyObject[2](DEFAULT_FLAG / *) !!I1 | *!! Default Info | Complex Info | * :: Name>"
ObjectInspector.configuration.default_scope = %i[self complex verbose]
my_object.inspect
# => "<MyObject[2](DEFAULT_FLAG / AO1_FLAG1 / AO2_FLAG1) !!I1 | VI2!! Default Info | Complex Info | Verbose Info :: Name>"
ObjectInspector.configuration.default_scope = :all
my_object.inspect
# => "<MyObject[2](DEFAULT_FLAG / AO1_FLAG1 / AO2_FLAG1) !!I1 | VI2!! Default Info | Complex Info | Verbose Info :: Name>"
If the Object being inspected wraps another object--i.e. defines #to_model and #to_model returns an object other than self--the inspect output will re-inspect the wrapped object. The wrapper points to the wrapped object with an arrow (⇨).
class MyWrapperObject
include ObjectInspector::InspectorsHelper
def to_model
@to_model ||= MyWrappedObject.new
end
private
def inspect_flags = "WRAPPER_FLAG1"
end
class MyWrappedObject
include ObjectInspector::InspectorsHelper
private
def inspect_flags = "FLAG1 / FLAG2"
def inspect_info = "INFO"
end
MyWrapperObject.new.inspect
# => "<MyWrapperObject(WRAPPER_FLAG1)> ⇨ <MyWrappedObject(FLAG1 / FLAG2) INFO>"
This feature is recursive.
If the Object being inspected is wrapped by an object that delegates all unknown methods to the wrapped object, then inspect flags will be doubled up. To get around this, redefine the inspect
method in the Wrapper object e.g. like:
class MyDelegatingWrapperObject
include ObjectInspector::InspectorsHelper
def initialize(my_object)
@my_object = my_object
end
def inspect(**kwargs)
super(identification: self.class.name,
name: nil,
flags: nil,
info: nil,
issues: nil,
**kwargs)
end
def to_model
@my_object
end
private
def method_missing(method_symbol, *args)
@my_object.__send__(method_symbol, *args)
end
def respond_to_missing?(*args)
@my_object.respond_to?(*args) || super
end
end
class MyWrappedObject
include ObjectInspector::InspectorsHelper
def display_name
"WRAPPED_OBJECT_NAME"
end
private
def inspect_flags = "FLAG1"
def inspect_info = "INFO"
def inspect_issues = "ISSUE1"
def inspect_name = "NAME"
end
MyDelegatingWrapperObject.new(MyWrappedObject.new).inspect
# => "<MyDelegatingWrapperObject> ⇨ <MyWrappedObject(FLAG1) !!ISSUE1!! INFO :: NAME>"
When passed as an option (as opposed to being called via an Object-defined method) symbols will be called/evaluated on Object on the fly.
class MyObject
include ObjectInspector::InspectorsHelper
def my_method1 = "Result1"
def my_method2 = "Result2"
def inspect_info = :my_method2
end
MyObject.new.inspect(info: "my_method1") # => "<MyObject my_method1>"
MyObject.new.inspect(info: :my_method2) # => "<MyObject Result2>"
MyObject.new.inspect # => "<MyObject my_method2>"
Pass nil
to any inspect method type to not display it:
class MyObject
include ObjectInspector::InspectorsHelper
def inspect_identification = "My Object"
def inspect_info = "INFO"
def inspect_flags = "FLAG1"
def inspect_issues = "ISSUE1"
def inspect_name = "NAME"
end
MyObject.new.inspect
# => "<My Object(FLAG1) !!ISSUE1!! INFO :: NAME>"
MyObject.new.inspect(info: nil, flags: nil, issues: nil)
# => "<My Object :: NAME>"
MyObject.new.inspect(identification: nil, info: nil, flags: nil, issues: nil, name: nil)
# => "<MyObject>"
A custom inspect formatter can be defined by implementing the interface defined by ObjectInspector::BaseFormatter. Then, either override the ObjectInspector::Configuration#formatter_class value (see Configuration) or just pass your custom class name into ObjectInspector::Inspector.new.
class MyCustomFormatter < ObjectInspector::BaseFormatter
def call
"[#{identification} Flags: #{flags} -- Info: #{info} -- Name: #{name}]"
end
end
class MyObject
include ObjectInspector::InspectorsHelper
def inspect
super(
formatter: MyCustomFormatter,
identification: "IDENTIFICATION",
flags: "FLAG1 / FLAG2",
info: "INFO",
name: "NAME")
end
end
MyObject.new.inspect
# => "[IDENTIFICATION Flags: FLAG1 / FLAG2 -- Info: INFO -- Name: NAME]"
See examples:
Object Inspector works great with the Object Identifier gem.
class MyObject
include ObjectInspector::InspectorsHelper
def my_method1
1
end
def my_method2
2
end
private
def inspect_identification
identify(:my_method1, :my_method2)
end
def inspect_flags = "FLAG1 / FLAG2"
def inspect_issues = "ISSUE1 | ISSUE2"
def inspect_info = "INFO"
def inspect_name = "NAME"
end
MyObject.new.inspect
# => "<MyObject[my_method1:1, my_method2:2](FLAG1 / FLAG2) !!ISSUE1 | ISSUE2!! INFO :: NAME>"
ObjectInspetor is ~2.75x slower than Ruby's default inspect, in Ruby v3.4.
Performance of Object Inspector can be tested by playing the Object Inspector Benchmarking Script in the IRB console for this gem.
load "script/benchmarking/object_inspector.rb"
# Reporting for: Ruby v3.4.2
#
# == Averaged =============================================================
# ...
#
# Comparison:
# Ruby: 58957.2 i/s
# ObjectInspector::Inspector: 21416.6 i/s - 2.75x slower
# == Done
ObjectInspector::TemplatingFormatter--which is the default Formatter--outperforms ObjectInspector::CombiningFormatter by about 30% on average.
Performance of Formatters can be tested by playing the Formatters Benchmarking Scripts in the IRB console for this gem.
load "script/benchmarking/formatters.rb"
# Reporting for: Ruby v3.4.2
#
# == Averaged =============================================================
# ...
#
# Comparison:
# ObjectInspector::TemplatingFormatter: 65856.3 i/s
# ObjectInspector::CombiningFormatter: 60920.0 i/s - 1.13x slower
# == Done
Custom Formatters may be similarly gauged for comparison by putting them into a constant CUSTOM_FORMATTER_CLASSES
before loading the script in the IRB console for this gem.
CUSTOM_FORMATTER_CLASSES = [MyCustomFormatter]
load "script/benchmarking/formatters.rb"
# Reporting for: Ruby v3.4.2
#
# == Averaged =============================================================
# ...
#
# Comparison:
# MyCustomFormatter: 74227.7 i/s
# ObjectInspector::TemplatingFormatter: 66148.5 i/s - 1.12x slower
# ObjectInspector::CombiningFormatter: 63289.7 i/s - 1.17x slower
# == Done
After checking out the repo, run bin/setup
to install dependencies. Then, run rake test
to run the tests. Or, run rake
to run the tests plus linters as well as yard
(to confirm proper YARD documentation practices). You can also run bin/console
for an interactive prompt that will allow you to experiment.
To install this gem onto your local machine, run bundle exec rake install
.
To test this gem:
rake
rubocop
reek
npx prettier . --check
npx prettier . --write
To release a new version of this gem to RubyGems:
- Update the version number in
version.rb
- Update
CHANGELOG.md
- Run
bundle
to update Gemfile.lock with the latest version info - Commit the changes. e.g.
Bump to vX.Y.Z
- Run
rake release
, which will create a git tag for the version, push git commits and the created tag, and push the.gem
file to rubygems.org.
YARD documentation can be generated and viewed live:
- Install YARD:
gem install yard
- Run the YARD server:
yard server --reload
- Open the live documentation site:
open http://localhost:8808
While the YARD server is running, documentation in the live site will be auto-updated on source code save (and site reload).
Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/pdobb/object_inspector.
The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.