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'State' Design Pattern from the Gang of Four book. Many other state machines focus on events and transitions. This state machine focuses on behavior and reducing conditional logic.
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StateObjects

This is a State Machine implementation based on the http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/State_pattern From the classic book http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Design_Patterns Each state is a separate class. You can add methods to the state classes, but each state class must have implement the same list of methods. State transitions are the responsibility of the state classes.

Focus

Many other state machines focus on events and state transitions. This state machine focuses on behavior. The main benefit of this gem is to reduce conditional logic by removing #if checks in the model and moving the logic into the state objects. Using Composition in this way can go a long way to simplify Rails models.

This gem works well with ActiveRecord classes, however ActiveRecord is not required. It can manage the state of regular Ruby objects as well.

Installation

Add this line to your application's Gemfile:

gem 'state_objects'

And then execute:

$ bundle

Or install it yourself as:

$ gem install state_objects

Usage

class WalkLights < ActiveRecord::Migration
  def change
    create_table :walk_lights do |t|
      t.string :color_state, :default => LightRedState.db_value
    end
end

class LightRedState  < StateObjects::Base
  state_object_values :red, 'R', "Dont Walk" 
  def change
    model.color_state_green!
    model.save!    
  end  
end        

class LightGreenState  < StateObjects::Base
  state_object_values :green, 'G', 'Walk' 
  def change
    model.color_state_red!
    model.save!    
  end  
end        

class WalkLight < ActiveRecord::Base
  extend StateObjects::ModelAdditions
  state_objects :color_state,
     LightGreenState,
     LightRedState 
  state_object_events :color_state, :change
                                                                                   
  scope :red,   where(WalkLight.color_state_red_occurs )    
  scope :green, where(WalkLight.color_state_green_occurs ) 
end

# now lets use it 
north_south_elm_300_block = WalkLight.create(color_state: LightRedState.db_value)
while (true)
  pause rand(200)  # keep the pedestrians guessing :-)
  north_south_elm_300_block.change
end

adds the following CLASS METHODS to WalkLight

  • color_states returns a array of 2-value arrays suitable to fill a select tag The second example shows how to start the selection on a blank

    <%= select :walk_light, :color_state, WalkLight.color_states %> <%= select :walk_light, :color_state, [['','']] + WalkLight.color_states %>

    assert_equal "['Walk', 'Dont Walk']", WalkLight.color_state_js_list

adds the following INSTANCE METHODS to WalkLight

color_state #  returns the single character value as in the db    
color_state_label  # returns the current values label    
color_state_symbol  # returns the current values symbol
  • methods ending in '?' return boolean if the value is set

  • methods ending in '!' set the value ( this does NOT save the model)

    color_state_red?
    color_state_red!

    color_state_green? color_state_green!

example #1: Selection list

walk_light = WalkLight.build(color_state: LightGreenState.db_value)
walk_light.color_state_red!
assert_equal 'R',                walk_light.color_state
assert_equal :red,               walk_light.color_state_symbol
assert_equal true,               walk_light.color_state_red?
assert_equal "Dont Walk",        walk_light.color_state_label

assert_equal [["Walk", "G"], ["Dont Walk", "R"]], WalkLight.color_states

Example #2: Selection list

<%=  select :walk_light, :color_state, WalkLight.color_states %> 

Example #3: Radio button labels

<% WalkLight.color_state_hash.each do | key, value | %>
    <%=  radio_button :walk_light, :color_state, key %> <%= value %><br />
<% end %>

Example #4: adding scope with _occurs

It's now easy to add scopes with using _occurs, which will generate your where statement for you.

scope :red,   where(WalkLight.color_state_red_occurs )     # => "(color_state ='R')"
scope :green, where(WalkLight.color_state_green_occurs )   # => "(color_state ='G')"   

Contributing

  1. Fork it
  2. Create your feature branch (git checkout -b my-new-feature)
  3. Commit your changes (git commit -am 'Add some feature')
  4. Push to the branch (git push origin my-new-feature)
  5. Create new Pull Request

Thanks To