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add logic to BooleanParser to allow for optional truthy arguments #132
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inveterateliterate
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@oroth8 some really clever changes and refactors / reusability! Some more trivial questions for you.
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Also correct me if I'm wrong @chawes13 but I think we generally update versions in each PR even if there are a handful open. I suppose you could update right after approval prior to merge to mitigate multiple commits around versioning. |
| `:boolean` will parse values of `true` and `1` as truthy. If another value is expected to be truthy, use the option `truth_value` to assign a custom truthy case. | ||
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| ```ruby | ||
| input :checkbox, :boolean, truth_value: 'yes' | ||
| ``` | ||
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This is interesting. It looks like there isn't really a place in the README to document which options are accepted for each parser. I think we can leave this here for now, but I'll create another issue to holistically address adding this missing documentation.
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@oroth8 Mind adding these details to the table that was added to the README in the PR for the issue Conor linked above?
| `:boolean` will parse values of `true` and `1` as truthy. If another value is expected to be truthy, use the option `truth_value` to assign a custom truthy case. | ||
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| ```ruby | ||
| input :checkbox, :boolean, truth_value: 'yes' |
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Out of curiosity, why truth instead of truthy?
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just personal preference, but can switch it to truthy
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I vote for truthy
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| def self.normalize(value) | ||
| raise Decanter::ParseError.new 'Expects a single value' if value.is_a? Array |
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Why is this part of the normalize method? I'd prefer to see the two decoupled, so that normalize can more closely follow the Single Responsibility Principle (i.e., be responsible for one thing)
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I thought about pulling it out but then we would have to check both val and the option_val separately making it less "dry". I opted for the dry trade off. However, looking at your comments below seems like we wont need to do this if opting for multiple option values.
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On a separate note I was flipping through all the parsers and I wonder if there's a bigger refactor available here: ValueParser could handle the array and empty checks. HashParser doesn't inherit from ValueParser (not totally sure why) but perhaps by the same logic ArrayParser could inherit from Base. All the other parsers do these same two checks. I haven't done a deep dive to test that out but wanted to surface
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I like where your head is at. I'd be open to that refactor
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| option_val = options.fetch(:true_value, nil) | ||
| normalized_option = normalize(option_val) |
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Out of curiosity, why are you only allowing one additional option to be specified? What if we wanted to allow "on" or "T" as well?
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the scope of the original issue seemed to indicate adding the ability for one optional value. That was my interpretation of the issue, but I can work on a solution that will allow for additional optional values if desired.
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I also took this as a design decision (perhaps implicitly by me and adopted by Owen). I don't wholeheartedly disagree with it as this option is per input and is meant to handle the nuance of a given input. Flexibility vs intentionality, and I can see both options. Either way that implementation detail can probably also be documented for the user.
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taking the more flexible route is definitely fine, as it obviously also covers the single case
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IMO, since the default includes multiple truthy values, then we should be able to specify one or multiple truthy values when using the custom option.
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| true_values = ['1', 'true'] | ||
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| option_val = options.fetch(:true_value, nil) |
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In the README, you named the option as truth_value. We'll need to update the code or the README to be consistent (and accurate)
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yep, this is a mistake. Do you think truthy_value or truthy_values is a better solution?
| normalized_option = normalize(option_val) | ||
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| true_values << normalized_option if normalized_option | ||
| true_values.find {|tv| !!/#{tv}/i.match(normalized_val)}.present? |
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🍔 (food for thought): This can be refactored a bit to deal directly with booleans.
true_values.any? { |tv| /#{tv}/i.match?(normalized_val) }https://ruby-doc.org/core-2.5.1/Regexp.html#method-i-match-3F
https://ruby-doc.org/core-2.7.0/Array.html#method-i-any-3F
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Seeing this code has made me realize that there is a defect here (which at this point would probably be considered a breaking change): we aren't matching the entire string (i.e., looking for an exact match) 😱 .
This means,
!!/1/.match("false1") # true
!!/true/.match("this is not true") # trueI'll raise an issue for this separately.
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good catch
| context 'returns true with options for' do | ||
| trues_with_options.each do |cond| | ||
| it "#{cond[0]}: #{cond[1]}, option: {#{cond[2]}: #{cond[3]}}" do | ||
| expect(parser.parse(name, cond[1], true_value: cond[3])).to match({name => true}) |
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Out of curiosity, is the older hashrocket syntax required?
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no it is not, but it seems that this spec file and some others use it. Might be worth updating all tests in a separate PR?
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Makes sense to me! Happy to consider that out of scope here
| context 'with empty string and empty options' do | ||
| it 'returns nil' do | ||
| expect(parser.parse(name, '', true_value: '')).to match({name => nil}) | ||
| end | ||
| end |
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This is an interesting edge case. Would you not expect setting true_value: "" to return true?
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In the normalize method we return nil if blank
return if (value.nil? || value.blank?) # line 22There was a problem hiding this comment.
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this was part of the originally functionality
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agreed - this also related to the them of a level of opinion in the parser
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| context 'returns false with options for' do | ||
| falses_with_options.each do |cond| |
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Do you need an array for this or could it be just a single assertion? It looks like you arrived to that conclusion by only having one entry in the array. I think you could make this test more explicit if you kept it just to one entry.
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@oroth8 Yikes, it's only been a year since I last looked at this 🙈 🙊 . Would you mind resolving the conflicts? Are there any other updates required from the code review feedback? |
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curious what's open on this one? kinda want to use it 😅 |
nicoledow
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Sorry for having this PR sitting out in the ether for ages. I really like this feature!
A couple things:
- It looks like the Travis build is failing due to some "invalid next" running in the updated specs. Lmk if you want to pair!
- It looks like the latest from
mainneeds to be pulled in
| `:boolean` will parse values of `true` and `1` as truthy. If another value is expected to be truthy, use the option `truth_value` to assign a custom truthy case. | ||
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| ```ruby | ||
| input :checkbox, :boolean, truth_value: 'yes' | ||
| ``` | ||
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@oroth8 Mind adding these details to the table that was added to the README in the PR for the issue Conor linked above?
| `:boolean` will parse values of `true` and `1` as truthy. If another value is expected to be truthy, use the option `truth_value` to assign a custom truthy case. | ||
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| ```ruby | ||
| input :checkbox, :boolean, truth_value: 'yes' |
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I vote for truthy
| option_val = options.fetch(:true_value, nil) | ||
| normalized_option = normalize(option_val) |
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IMO, since the default includes multiple truthy values, then we should be able to specify one or multiple truthy values when using the custom option.
Items Addressed
feature request
true_valueoption to:booleanparsertrue_valuecan be any single valueNotes for Reviewers
true_valuebut open for suggestions