Question:
Does Ruby safe navigation operator (&.
) evaluate its parameters when its receiver is nil
?
For example:
logger&.log("Something important happened...")
- Is the
"Something important happened..."
string evaluated here? - Could you provide an authoritative source, which proves or denies this fact?
- Or suggest a way how to check it?
Thanks in advance.
Why I am looking for an answer to this question?
I have the code like the following throughout my codebase:
logger.log("Something important happened. (#{Time.current})") if verbose
My main goal is to remove the repetition of the if verbose
check whenever I call the log
method since it is easy to forget about it and you will be not notified at all about the misusage.
Inspired by the Tell, don't ask principle,
I have moved if verbose
check inside log
method implementation.
class Logger
# ...
def log(message)
return unless verbose
# ...
end
end
def logger
@logger ||= Logger.new
end
logger.log("Something important happened. (#{Time.current})")
This approach simplified my code since I have solved my main problem - I don't need to remember to place if verbose
whenever I call the log
method,
but I have received another issue.
"Something important..."
string is always evaluated, no matter whether verbose
is true
or false
.
Therefore, I have completely changed the solution:
logger
returnsnil
whenverbose
isfalse
.- Ruby safe navigation operator should be used in front of
log
calls.
def logger
@logger ||= Logger.new if verbose
end
logger&.log("Something important happened. (#{Time.current})")
As a result, I have replaced the initial problem of remembering if verbose
checks to remembering of &.
calls.
But, anyway, I consider this as an improvement, since forgetting to utilize the safe navigation operator raises the NoMethodError
, in other words, notifies about the log
method misusage.
So now, in order to be sure that the 'safe navigation operator approach' is actually a 'better' option for my problem,
I need to know exactly whether the safe navigation operator in Ruby evaluates its parameters when its receiver is nil
.
To quote from the syntax documentation for the safe navigation operator:
As such, the arguments of your
log
method are not evaluated if thelogger
isnil
when you call it asWith that being said, note that the Ruby core logger offers a different solution to your exact issue, namely to avoid having to evaluate potentially expensive arguments if the log level is to high.
The Ruby core logger implements its
add
method something like this (simplified):You can then use this as
Here, the block is only evaluated if the log level is high enough that the message is actually used.