[#65451] [ruby-trunk - Feature #10333] [PATCH 3/1] optimize: "yoda literal" == string — ko1@...
Issue #10333 has been updated by Koichi Sasada.
9 messages
2014/10/07
[#65458] Re: [ruby-trunk - Feature #10333] [PATCH 3/1] optimize: "yoda literal" == string
— Eric Wong <normalperson@...>
2014/10/07
[email protected] wrote:
[#65502] Re: [ruby-trunk - Feature #10333] [PATCH 3/1] optimize: "yoda literal" == string
— Eric Wong <normalperson@...>
2014/10/08
Eric Wong <[email protected]> wrote:
[#65538] Re: [ruby-trunk - Feature #10333] [PATCH 3/1] optimize: "yoda literal" == string
— Eric Wong <normalperson@...>
2014/10/09
Eric Wong <[email protected]> wrote:
[#65549] Re: [ruby-trunk - Feature #10333] [PATCH 3/1] optimize: "yoda literal" == string
— SASADA Koichi <ko1@...>
2014/10/09
On 2014/10/09 11:04, Eric Wong wrote:
[#65551] Re: [ruby-trunk - Feature #10333] [PATCH 3/1] optimize: "yoda literal" == string
— Eric Wong <normalperson@...>
2014/10/09
SASADA Koichi <[email protected]> wrote:
[#65453] [ruby-trunk - Feature #10328] [PATCH] make OPT_SUPPORT_JOKE a proper VM option — ko1@...
Issue #10328 has been updated by Koichi Sasada.
3 messages
2014/10/07
[#65559] is there a name for this? — Xavier Noria <fxn@...>
When describing stuff about constants (working in their guide), you often
7 messages
2014/10/09
[#65560] Re: is there a name for this?
— Nobuyoshi Nakada <nobu@...>
2014/10/09
On 2014/10/09 20:41, Xavier Noria wrote:
[#65561] Re: is there a name for this?
— Xavier Noria <fxn@...>
2014/10/09
On Thu, Oct 9, 2014 at 1:59 PM, Nobuyoshi Nakada <[email protected]> wrote:
[#65566] [ruby-trunk - Feature #10351] [Open] [PATCH] prevent CVE-2014-6277 — shyouhei@...
Issue #10351 has been reported by Shyouhei Urabe.
3 messages
2014/10/09
[#65741] Re: [ruby-cvs:55121] normal:r47971 (trunk): test/ruby/test_rubyoptions.rb: fix race — Nobuyoshi Nakada <nobu@...>
On 2014/10/16 10:10, [email protected] wrote:
5 messages
2014/10/16
[#65742] Re: [ruby-cvs:55121] normal:r47971 (trunk): test/ruby/test_rubyoptions.rb: fix race
— Eric Wong <normalperson@...>
2014/10/16
Nobuyoshi Nakada <[email protected]> wrote:
[#65750] Re: [ruby-cvs:55121] normal:r47971 (trunk): test/ruby/test_rubyoptions.rb: fix race
— Tanaka Akira <akr@...>
2014/10/16
2014-10-16 12:48 GMT+09:00 Eric Wong <[email protected]>:
[#65753] [ruby-trunk - Feature #10333] [PATCH 3/1] optimize: "yoda literal" == string — ko1@...
Issue #10333 has been updated by Koichi Sasada.
3 messages
2014/10/16
[#65818] [ruby-trunk - Feature #10351] [PATCH] prevent CVE-2014-6277 — shyouhei@...
Issue #10351 has been updated by Shyouhei Urabe.
3 messages
2014/10/20
[ruby-core:65446] [ruby-trunk - Feature #9112] Make module lookup more dynamic (Including modules into a module after it has already been included)
From:
headius@...
Date:
2014-10-06 20:33:21 UTC
List:
ruby-core #65446
Issue #9112 has been updated by Charles Nutter.
nobu's point about reincluding the same module brought up a different concern.
Many modules perform very specific actions at include time. If they did not go through a reinclude process for every hierarchy, those changes might not happen. For example:
module X
def self.included(target)
... make changes to target hierarchy in addition to the include
end
end
module Y
include X # incuded runs against Y hierarchy
end
class A
include Y # included for both Y and X run under current behavior, but only Y would run under new behavior
end
----------------------------------------
Feature #9112: Make module lookup more dynamic (Including modules into a module after it has already been included)
https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/9112#change-49232
* Author: Tobias Pfeiffer
* Status: Assigned
* Priority: Normal
* Assignee: Yukihiro Matsumoto
* Category: core
* Target version:
----------------------------------------
If a module (M) is included into a class (C) and afterwards another module (M2) is included into the first module (M) then C does not include M2 and instances do not respond to methods defined in M2. I think instances of C should respond to methods defined in M2 and C should include M2.
I created a gist detailing the problem I have: https://gist.github.com/PragTob/7472643
I think this behavior is confusing, because if I'd reopen module M and just add methods there then instances of C can call those methods. However if I include another module in M then instances of C can not call those methods.
Any opinions on if this would be a better behavior or why it isn't?
(was unsure to file it as a bug or feature)
--
https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/