2024-05-01 11:35:20 +02:00

70 lines
1.8 KiB
Ruby

# typed: strict
# frozen_string_literal: true
# Most objects are cloneable, but not all. For example you can't dup methods:
#
# ```ruby
# method(:puts).dup # => TypeError: allocator undefined for Method
# ```
#
# Classes may signal their instances are not duplicable removing +dup+/+clone+
# or raising exceptions from them. So, to dup an arbitrary object you normally
# use an optimistic approach and are ready to catch an exception, say:
#
# ```ruby
# arbitrary_object.dup rescue object
# ```
#
# Rails dups objects in a few critical spots where they are not that arbitrary.
# That `rescue` is very expensive (like 40 times slower than a predicate) and it
# is often triggered.
#
# That's why we hardcode the following cases and check duplicable? instead of
# using that rescue idiom.
# rubocop:disable Layout/EmptyLines
# rubocop:enable Layout/EmptyLines
class Object
# Can you safely dup this object?
#
# False for method objects;
# true otherwise.
sig { returns(T::Boolean) }
def duplicable? = true
end
class Method
# Methods are not duplicable:
#
# ```ruby
# method(:puts).duplicable? # => false
# method(:puts).dup # => TypeError: allocator undefined for Method
# ```
sig { returns(FalseClass) }
def duplicable? = false
end
class UnboundMethod
# Unbound methods are not duplicable:
#
# ```ruby
# method(:puts).unbind.duplicable? # => false
# method(:puts).unbind.dup # => TypeError: allocator undefined for UnboundMethod
# ```
sig { returns(FalseClass) }
def duplicable? = false
end
require "singleton"
module Singleton
# Singleton instances are not duplicable:
#
# ```ruby
# Class.new.include(Singleton).instance.dup # TypeError (can't dup instance of singleton
# ```
sig { returns(FalseClass) }
def duplicable? = false
end