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Contract value object are designed for two purposes:

  1. To create objects that act like values (in the same way that two ruby Date objects are the same if their year, month, and date are the same).
  2. To guarantee that objects can only be created with correct values. That means that no invalid value types should be able to exist.

The inspiration for the value object part is taken from Martin Fowler's discussion of the matter. It's implemented on top of the Contracts gem that allows us to define the accepted values for each attribute.

In other words it's much like this GIF:

Installation

Add this line to your application's Gemfile:

gem 'contract_value_object'

And then execute:

$ bundle

Or install it yourself as:

$ gem install contract_value_object

Usage

There are two main methods that are exposed when constructing a Contract Value Object:

  • attributes - allows you to define all of the attributes that you expect to be passed in

    • input: hash, where the keys are the names of the attributes and the keys are the contract that must be met
  • defaults - allows you to define the default values that will be set if a value will not be passed in. All of these should explicitly Optional contracts in the attributes.

    • input: hash, where the keys are the attributes that should be default and the keys are the default values

Additionally, Contract value object expects that you can redefine the setters for the arguments. These setters will still check their contracts. They do, however, give us two abilities:

  1. Perform more complicated validations
  2. Allow transformations of the original data.

Example usage:

class Truck < ContractValueObject
  class Wheel < ContractValueObject
    attributes(
      size: Optional[Enum[:xs, :s, :m, :l, :xl]],
    )

    defaults(
      size: :m,
    )
  end

  attributes(
    wheels: ArrayOf[Wheel],
    color: Enum[:red, :white, :blue],
    model: String,
  )

  private

  def wheels=(wheels)
    # transform all the inputs into wheels
    if wheels.all? { |wheel| wheel.is_a?(Symbol) }
      wheels = wheels.map do |size|
        Wheel.new(size: size)
      end
    end

    # make sure that wheels behave rationally
    raise ArgumentError, 'All of the wheels should be the same size' if wheels.uniq(&:size).count != 1

    @wheels = wheels
  end
end

truck = Truck.new(
  wheels: [Truck::Wheel.new, Truck::Wheel.new, Truck::Wheel.new, Truck::Wheel.new],
  color: :red,
  model: 'Ford F150',
)

One final thing to note, is that contract value objects will present all of the errors to the user at once. Suppose we construct an invalid truck:

Truck.new(
  wheels: [:s, :m, :m, :l],
  model: :ford
)

We'll get back a full error that says:

ContractValueObject::DefinitionError:
1. `color`: Missing attribute `color`.
        Expected: #<Contracts::Builtin::Enum:0x007fcdff85c148 @vals=[:red, :white, :blue]>
2. `wheels`: All of the wheels should be the same size
3. `model`: Attribute `model` does not conform to its contract.
        Expected: String
        Actual: Symbol (:ford)

Development

Run rake spec to run the tests. You can also run bin/console for an interactive prompt that will allow you to experiment.

To install this gem onto your local environment, run bundle exec rake install. To release a new version:

  1. rake release

Contributing

Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/Gusto/contract_value_object. This project is intended to be a safe, welcoming space for collaboration, and contributors are expected to adhere to the Contributor Covenant code of conduct.

License

The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.

Code of Conduct

Everyone interacting in the Contract Value Object project’s codebases, issue trackers, chat rooms and mailing lists is expected to follow the code of conduct.

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Validate that your objects have the right inputs.

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