class IRB::Inspector
An irb inspector
In order to create your own custom inspector there are two things you should be aware of:
Inspector
uses inspect_value
, or inspect_proc
, for output of return values.
This also allows for an optional init
+, or init_proc
, which is called when the inspector is activated.
Knowing this, you can create a rudimentary inspector as follows:
irb(main):001:0> ins = IRB::Inspector.new(proc{ |v| "omg! #{v}" }) irb(main):001:0> IRB.CurrentContext.inspect_mode = ins # => omg! #<IRB::Inspector:0x007f46f7ba7d28> irb(main):001:0> "what?" #=> omg! what?
Constants
- INSPECTORS
Default inspectors available to irb, this includes:
:pp
-
Using Kernel#pretty_inspect
:yaml
-
Using YAML.dump
:marshal
-
Using Marshal.dump
Public Class Methods
Example
Inspector.def_inspector(key, init_p=nil){|v| v.inspect} Inspector.def_inspector([key1,..], init_p=nil){|v| v.inspect} Inspector.def_inspector(key, inspector) Inspector.def_inspector([key1,...], inspector)
# File irb/inspector.rb, line 64 def self.def_inspector(key, arg=nil, &block) if block_given? inspector = IRB::Inspector(block, arg) else inspector = arg end case key when Array for k in key def_inspector(k, inspector) end when Symbol INSPECTORS[key] = inspector INSPECTORS[key.to_s] = inspector when String INSPECTORS[key] = inspector INSPECTORS[key.intern] = inspector else INSPECTORS[key] = inspector end end
Determines the inspector to use where inspector
is one of the keys passed during inspector definition.
# File irb/inspector.rb, line 54 def self.keys_with_inspector(inspector) INSPECTORS.select{|k,v| v == inspector}.collect{|k, v| k} end
Creates a new inspector object, using the given inspect_proc
when output return values in irb.
# File irb/inspector.rb, line 89 def initialize(inspect_proc, init_proc = nil) @init = init_proc @inspect = inspect_proc end
Public Instance Methods
Proc to call when the inspector is activated, good for requiring dependent libraries.
# File irb/inspector.rb, line 96 def init @init.call if @init end
Proc to call when the input is evaluated and output in irb.
# File irb/inspector.rb, line 101 def inspect_value(v) @inspect.call(v) end