将字符串中的类名转换为实际类

如何从包含类名的字符串中调用类?(我想我可以做情况/时,但这似乎很丑陋。)

我之所以这样问,是因为我使用的是 acts_as_commentable插件,这些插件将可注释 _ type 存储为一个列。我希望能够调用任何特定的可注释类来对它执行 find(commentable_id)

谢谢。

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I think what you want is constantize

That's an RoR construct. I don't know if there's one for ruby core

"Object".constantize # => Object

It depends on the string...

If it already has the proper shape (casing, pluralization, etc), and would otherwise map directly to an object, then:

Rails:

'User'.constantize # => User

Ruby:

Module.const_get 'User' # => User

But otherwise (note the difference in casing):

'user'.constantize # => NameError: wrong constant name user


Module.const_get 'user' # => NameError: wrong constant name user

Therefore, you must ask... is the source string singular or plural (does it reference a table or not?), is it multi-word and AlreadyCamelCased or is_it_underscored?

With Rails you have these tools at your disposal:

Use camelize to convert strings to UpperCamelCase strings, even handling underscores and forward slashes:

'object'.constantize # => NameError: wrong constant name object
'object'.camelize # => "Object"
'object'.camelize.constantize # => Object
'active_model/errors'.camelize # => "ActiveModel::Errors"
'active_model/errors'.camelize.constantize # => ActiveModel::Errors

Use classify to convert a string, which may even be plural (i.e. perhaps it's a table reference), to create a class name (still a string), then call constantize to try to find and return the class name constant (note that in Ruby class names are constants):

'users'.classify => "User" # a string
'users'.classify.constantize # => User


'user'.classify => "User" # a string
'user'.classify.constantize # => User


'ham_and_eggs'.classify # => "HamAndEgg"

In POR (Plain Old Ruby), you have capitalize, but it only works for the first word:

Module.const_get 'user'.capitalize => User

...otherwise you must use fundamental tools like strip, split, map, join, etc. to achieve the appropriate manipulation:

class HamAndEgg end # => nil
Module.const_get ' ham and eggs '.strip.gsub(/s$/,'').split(' ').map{|w| w.capitalize}.join # => HamAndEgg

If you want to convert string to actuall class name to access model or any other class

str = "group class"


> str.camelize.constantize 'or'
> str.classify.constantize 'or'
> str.titleize.constantize


Example :
def call_me(str)
str.titleize.gsub(" ","").constantize.all
end


Call method : call_me("group class")


Result:
GroupClass Load (0.7ms) SELECT `group_classes`.* FROM `group_classes`

When ActiveSupport is available (e.g. in Rails): String#constantize or String#safe_constantize, that is "ClassName".constantize.

In pure Ruby: Module#const_get, typically Object.const_get("ClassName").

In recent rubies, both work with constants nested in modules, like in Object.const_get("Outer::Inner").

I know this is an old question but I just want to leave this note, it may be helpful for others.

In plain Ruby, Module.const_get can find nested constants. For instance, having the following structure:

module MyModule
module MySubmodule
class MyModel
end
end
end

You can use it as follows:

Module.const_get("MyModule::MySubmodule::MyModel")
MyModule.const_get("MySubmodule")
MyModule::MySubmodule.const_get("MyModel")