An OpenStruct
is a data structure, similar to a Hash
, that allows the definition of arbitrary attributes with their accompanying values. This is accomplished by using Ruby’s metaprogramming to define methods on the class itself.
Examples
require "ostruct" person = OpenStruct.new person.name = "John Smith" person.age = 70 person.name # => "John Smith" person.age # => 70 person.address # => nil
An OpenStruct
employs a Hash
internally to store the attributes and values and can even be initialized with one:
australia = OpenStruct.new(:country => "Australia", :capital => "Canberra") # => #<OpenStruct country="Australia", capital="Canberra">
Hash
keys with spaces or characters that could normally not be used for method calls (e.g. ()[]*
) will not be immediately available on the OpenStruct
object as a method for retrieval or assignment, but can still be reached through the Object#send
method or using [].
measurements = OpenStruct.new("length (in inches)" => 24) measurements[:"length (in inches)"] # => 24 measurements.send("length (in inches)") # => 24 message = OpenStruct.new(:queued? => true) message.queued? # => true message.send("queued?=", false) message.queued? # => false
Removing the presence of an attribute requires the execution of the delete_field
method as setting the property value to nil
will not remove the attribute.
first_pet = OpenStruct.new(:name => "Rowdy", :owner => "John Smith") second_pet = OpenStruct.new(:name => "Rowdy") first_pet.owner = nil first_pet # => #<OpenStruct name="Rowdy", owner=nil> first_pet == second_pet # => false first_pet.delete_field(:owner) first_pet # => #<OpenStruct name="Rowdy"> first_pet == second_pet # => true
Ractor
compatibility: A frozen OpenStruct
with shareable values is itself shareable.
Caveats
An OpenStruct
utilizes Ruby’s method lookup structure to find and define the necessary methods for properties. This is accomplished through the methods method_missing and define_singleton_method.
This should be a consideration if there is a concern about the performance of the objects that are created, as there is much more overhead in the setting of these properties compared to using a Hash
or a Struct
. Creating an open struct from a small Hash
and accessing a few of the entries can be 200 times slower than accessing the hash directly.
This is a potential security issue; building OpenStruct
from untrusted user data (e.g. JSON
web request) may be susceptible to a “symbol denial of service” attack since the keys create methods and names of methods are never garbage collected.
This may also be the source of incompatibilities between Ruby versions:
o = OpenStruct.new o.then # => nil in Ruby < 2.6, enumerator for Ruby >= 2.6
Builtin methods may be overwritten this way, which may be a source of bugs or security issues:
o = OpenStruct.new o.methods # => [:to_h, :marshal_load, :marshal_dump, :each_pair, ... o.methods = [:foo, :bar] o.methods # => [:foo, :bar]
To help remedy clashes, OpenStruct
uses only protected/private methods ending with ‘!` and defines aliases for builtin public methods by adding a `!`:
o = OpenStruct.new(make: 'Bentley', class: :luxury) o.class # => :luxury o.class! # => OpenStruct
It is recommended (but not enforced) to not use fields ending in ‘!`; Note that a subclass’ methods may not be overwritten, nor can OpenStruct’s own methods ending with ‘!`.
For all these reasons, consider not using OpenStruct
at all.
# File tmp/rubies/ruby-3.0.5/ext/json/lib/json/add/ostruct.rb, line 11
def self.json_create(object)
new(object['t'] || object[:t])
end
# File tmp/rubies/ruby-3.0.5/lib/ostruct.rb, line 126
def initialize(hash=nil)
if hash
update_to_values!(hash)
else
@table = {}
end
end
Creates a new OpenStruct
object. By default, the resulting OpenStruct
object will have no attributes.
The optional hash
, if given, will generate attributes and values (can be a Hash
, an OpenStruct
or a Struct
). For example:
require "ostruct" hash = { "country" => "Australia", :capital => "Canberra" } data = OpenStruct.new(hash) data # => #<OpenStruct country="Australia", capital="Canberra">
# File tmp/rubies/ruby-3.0.5/lib/ostruct.rb, line 376
def ==(other)
return false unless other.kind_of?(OpenStruct)
@table == other.table!
end
Compares this object and other
for equality. An OpenStruct
is equal to other
when other
is an OpenStruct
and the two objects’ Hash
tables are equal.
require "ostruct" first_pet = OpenStruct.new("name" => "Rowdy") second_pet = OpenStruct.new(:name => "Rowdy") third_pet = OpenStruct.new("name" => "Rowdy", :age => nil) first_pet == second_pet # => true first_pet == third_pet # => false
# File tmp/rubies/ruby-3.0.5/lib/ostruct.rb, line 263
def [](name)
@table[name.to_sym]
end
Returns the value of an attribute, or ‘nil` if there is no such attribute.
require "ostruct" person = OpenStruct.new("name" => "John Smith", "age" => 70) person[:age] # => 70, same as person.age
# File tmp/rubies/ruby-3.0.5/lib/ostruct.rb, line 278
def []=(name, value)
name = name.to_sym
new_ostruct_member!(name)
@table[name] = value
end
Sets the value of an attribute.
require "ostruct" person = OpenStruct.new("name" => "John Smith", "age" => 70) person[:age] = 42 # equivalent to person.age = 42 person.age # => 42
# File tmp/rubies/ruby-3.0.5/ext/json/lib/json/add/ostruct.rb, line 17
def as_json(*)
klass = self.class.name
klass.to_s.empty? and raise JSON::JSONError, "Only named structs are supported!"
{
JSON.create_id => klass,
't' => table,
}
end
Returns a hash, that will be turned into a JSON
object and represent this object.
# File tmp/rubies/ruby-3.0.5/lib/ostruct.rb, line 325
def delete_field(name)
sym = name.to_sym
begin
singleton_class.remove_method(sym, "#{sym}=")
rescue NameError
end
@table.delete(sym) do
raise! NameError.new("no field `#{sym}' in #{self}", sym)
end
end
Removes the named field from the object. Returns the value that the field contained if it was defined.
require "ostruct" person = OpenStruct.new(name: "John", age: 70, pension: 300) person.delete_field!("age") # => 70 person # => #<OpenStruct name="John", pension=300>
Setting the value to nil
will not remove the attribute:
person.pension = nil person # => #<OpenStruct name="John", pension=nil>
# File tmp/rubies/ruby-3.0.5/lib/ostruct.rb, line 300
def dig(name, *names)
begin
name = name.to_sym
rescue NoMethodError
raise! TypeError, "#{name} is not a symbol nor a string"
end
@table.dig(name, *names)
end
Finds and returns the object in nested objects that is specified by name
and identifiers
. The nested objects may be instances of various classes. See Dig Methods.
Examples:
require "ostruct" address = OpenStruct.new("city" => "Anytown NC", "zip" => 12345) person = OpenStruct.new("name" => "John Smith", "address" => address) person.dig(:address, "zip") # => 12345 person.dig(:business_address, "zip") # => nil
# File tmp/rubies/ruby-3.0.5/lib/ostruct.rb, line 189
def each_pair
return to_enum(__method__) { @table.size } unless block_given?
@table.each_pair{|p| yield p}
self
end
Yields all attributes (as symbols) along with the corresponding values or returns an enumerator if no block is given.
require "ostruct" data = OpenStruct.new("country" => "Australia", :capital => "Canberra") data.each_pair.to_a # => [[:country, "Australia"], [:capital, "Canberra"]]
# File tmp/rubies/ruby-3.0.5/lib/ostruct.rb, line 386
def eql?(other)
return false unless other.kind_of?(OpenStruct)
@table.eql?(other.table!)
end
Compares this object and other
for equality. An OpenStruct
is eql? to other
when other
is an OpenStruct
and the two objects’ Hash
tables are eql?.
# File tmp/rubies/ruby-3.0.5/lib/ostruct.rb, line 230
def freeze
@table.freeze
super
end
# File tmp/rubies/ruby-3.0.5/lib/ostruct.rb, line 341
def inspect
ids = (Thread.current[InspectKey] ||= [])
if ids.include?(object_id)
detail = ' ...'
else
ids << object_id
begin
detail = @table.map do |key, value|
" #{key}=#{value.inspect}"
end.join(',')
ensure
ids.pop
end
end
['#<', self.class!, detail, '>'].join
end
Returns a string containing a detailed summary of the keys and values.
# File tmp/rubies/ruby-3.0.5/lib/ostruct.rb, line 169
def to_h(&block)
if block
@table.to_h(&block)
else
@table.dup
end
end
Converts the OpenStruct
to a hash with keys representing each attribute (as symbols) and their corresponding values.
If a block is given, the results of the block on each pair of the receiver will be used as pairs.
require "ostruct" data = OpenStruct.new("country" => "Australia", :capital => "Canberra") data.to_h # => {:country => "Australia", :capital => "Canberra" } data.to_h {|name, value| [name.to_s, value.upcase] } # => {"country" => "AUSTRALIA", "capital" => "CANBERRA" }
# File tmp/rubies/ruby-3.0.5/ext/json/lib/json/add/ostruct.rb, line 28
def to_json(*args)
as_json.to_json(*args)
end
Stores class name (OpenStruct
) with this struct’s values t
as a JSON
string.