What is the purpose of "!" and "?" at the end of method names?
Sometimes I see methods in Ruby that have "?" and "!" at the end of them, e.g:
name = "sample_string"
name.reverse
name.reverse!
name.is_binary_data?
I was wondering what their purpose is? Are they just syntax sugarcoatin开发者_JS百科g?
It's "just sugarcoating" for readability, but they do have common meanings:
- Methods ending in
!
perform some permanent or potentially dangerous change; for example:Enumerable#sort
returns a sorted version of the object whileEnumerable#sort!
sorts it in place.- In Rails,
ActiveRecord::Base#save
returns false if saving failed, whileActiveRecord::Base#save!
raises an exception. Kernel::exit
causes a script to exit, whileKernel::exit!
does so immediately, bypassing any exit handlers.
- Methods ending in
?
return a boolean, which makes the code flow even more intuitively like a sentence —if number.zero?
reads like "if the number is zero", butif number.zero
just looks weird.
In your example, name.reverse
evaluates to a reversed string, but only after the name.reverse!
line does the name
variable actually contain the reversed name. name.is_binary_data?
looks like "is name
binary data?".
Question mark indicates that the method returns boolean. Already answered here:
What does the question mark operator mean in Ruby?
The bang indicates that the method acts on the object itself. Already answered here:
Why are exclamation marks used in Ruby methods?
In Ruby the ?
means that the method is going to return a boolean and the !
modifies the object it was called on. They are there to improve readability when looking at the code.
In contrast to the – I suppose – majority of programming languages ...
Ruby, methods are allowed to end with question marks or exclamation marks.
By convention, methods that answer questions (i.e. Array#empty? returns true if the receiver is empty) end in question marks.
Potentially “dangerous” methods (ie methods that modify self or the arguments, exit! etc.) by convention end with exclamation marks.
From: http://www.ruby-lang.org/en/documentation/ruby-from-other-languages/, Section Funny method names
Beware, this isn't always the case. Take for example, Ruby Array#concat http://docs.ruby-lang.org/en/2.0.0/Array.html#method-i-concat.
Where you can get burnt badly is something like MyActiveRecordModel.column_names.concat([url])
. Later calls related to MyActiveRecordModel will try to look for a column of 'url' for MyActiveRecordModel and throw.
Instead you must clone it before doing the concat. Fortunately my test suite caught this one, but.. heads up!
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