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backports's Introduction

Backports Library Gem Version Tidelift

Yearning to use some of the new cool features in Ruby 2.7 while using 2.3.x? Have some legacy code in Ruby 1.8 but can't live without flat_map?

This gem is for you!

The goal of 'backports' is to make it easier to write ruby code that runs across different versions of Ruby.

Note: Next major version (X-mas 2020) will drop support for Ruby < 2.2.

Loading backports

Explicitly (recommended)

For example, if you want to use transform_values and transform_keys, even in Ruby implementations that don't include it:

require 'backports/2.4.0/hash/transform_values'
require 'backports/2.5.0/hash/transform_keys'

This will enable Hash#transform_values and Hash#transform_keys, using the native versions if available or otherwise provide a pure Ruby version.

By Module

To bring all the backports for a given Class/Module, you can specify only that Class:

require 'backports/2.3.0/hash'

This will make sure that Hash responds to dig, fetch_values, <, <=, >, >= and to_proc

Up to a specific Ruby version (deprecated)

Although this is deprecated, you can load all backports up to a specific version. For example, to bring any version of Ruby mostly up to Ruby 2.4.0's standards:

require 'backports/2.4.0'

This will bring in all the features of 1.8.7 and many features of Ruby 1.9.x all the way up to Ruby 2.4.0 (for all versions of Ruby)!

While it is not recommended, you may require 'backports/latest' as a shortcut to the latest Ruby version supported. This is equivalent to the deprecated require 'backports'.

Note: Although I am a Ruby committer, this gem is a personal project and is not endorsed by ruby-core.

What's inside

Goals for backported features:

  1. Won't break older code
  2. Pure Ruby (no C extensions)
  3. Pass ruby/spec

Let's be a bit more precise about the "breaking code" business. It is of course entirely possible that code will break. In particular, you may be distinguishing parameters with duck typing, but a builtin class may, in the future, be responding to a particular call. Here's {an exemple from Rails}(https://github.com/rails/rails/blob/a4b55827721a5967299f3c1531afb3d6d81 e4ac0/activerecord/lib/active_record/associations/association.rb#L155-L159) that is relying on the fact that Proc and Method respond to :to_proc and Hash isn't. That is, until Ruby 2.3... This old version of Rails therefore won't work on Ruby 2.3, or on older Rubies with that the 2.3.0/hash/to_proc loaded...

For Ruby < 2.0, there are some real incompatibilities. For example, Module::instance_methods which returns strings in 1.8 and symbols in 1.9. No change can be made without the risk of breaking existing code. Such incompatibilities are left unchanged, although you can require some of these changes in addition (see below).

Installation & compatibility

backports can be installed with:

gem install backports

To use:

require 'rubygems'
# For only specific backports:
require 'backports/1.9.1/kernel/require_relative'
require 'backports/2.0.0/enumerable/lazy'

# For all backports up to a given version
require 'backports/1.9.2' # All backports for Ruby 1.9.2 and below

Note: about a dozen of backports have a dependency that will be also loaded. For example, the backport of Enumerable#flat_map uses flatten(1), so if required from Ruby 1.8.6 (where Array#flatten does not accept an argument), the backport for Ruby's 1.8.7 flatten with an argument will also be loaded.

With bundler, add to your Gemfile:

gem 'backports', :require => false

Run bundle install and require the desired backports. Compatible with Ruby itself, JRuby and Rubinius.

Complete List of backports

Ruby 2.7 backports

  • Array

  • intersection

  • Comparable

  • clamp (with range)

  • Complex

  • +<=>+

  • Enumerable

  • filter_map

  • tally

  • Enumerator

  • produce (class method)

  • Time

  • floor, ceil

Ruby 2.6 backports

  • Array

  • difference, union

  • to_h (with block)

  • Enumerable

  • chain

  • to_h (with block)

  • Enumerator::Chain (use Enumerable#chain)

  • Hash

  • merge, merge!/update (with multiple arguments)

  • to_h (with block)

  • Kernel

  • then

  • Method

  • +<<+, +>>+

  • Proc

  • +<<+, +>>+

Ruby 2.5 backports

  • Array

  • append, prepend

  • Dir

  • children, each_child

  • Enumerable

  • any?, all?, none?, one? (with pattern argument)

  • Hash

  • slice

  • transform_keys

  • Integer

  • sqrt

  • allbits?, anybits? and nobits?

  • Kernel

  • yield_self

  • Module

  • attr, attr_accessor, attr_reader, attr_writer (now public)

  • define_method, alias_method, undef_method, remove_method (now public)

  • String

  • delete_prefix, delete_prefix!

  • delete_suffix, delete_suffix!

  • undump

  • Struct

  • new (with keyword_init: true)

Ruby 2.4 backports

  • Comparable

  • clamp

  • Enumerable

  • sum

  • uniq

  • Hash

  • compact, compact!

  • transform_values, transform_values!

  • Regexp

  • match?

  • String

  • match?

  • FalseClass, Fixnum, Float, NilClass, TrueClass

  • dup

Ruby 2.3 backports

  • Array

  • bsearch_index

  • dig

  • Enumerable

  • chunk_while

  • grep_v

  • Hash

  • dig

  • fetch_values

  • to_proc

  • <=, <, >=, >

  • Numeric

  • negative?

  • positive?

  • String

  • unary + and -

  • Struct

  • dig

Ruby 2.2 backports

  • Enumerable

  • slice_after

  • slice_when

  • Float

  • prev_float

  • next_float

  • Kernel

  • itself

  • Method

  • curry

  • super_method

  • String

  • unicode_normalize

  • unicode_normalize!

  • unicode_normalize?

Ruby 2.1 backports

  • Array

  • to_h

  • Bignum

  • bit_length

  • Enumerable

  • to_h

  • Fixnum

  • bit_length

  • Module

  • include (now public)

Ruby 2.0 backports

  • Array

  • bsearch

  • Enumerable

  • lazy

  • Enumerator::Lazy

  • all methods

  • Hash

  • default_proc= (with nil argument)

  • to_h

  • nil.to_h

  • Range

  • bsearch

  • Struct

  • to_h

Ruby 1.9.3 backports

  • File

  • NULL

  • IO

  • advise (acts as a noop)

  • write, binwrite

  • String

  • byteslice

  • prepend

Ruby 1.9.2 backports

  • Array

  • rotate, rotate!

  • keep_if, select!

  • product (with block)

  • repeated_combination, repeated_permutation

  • sort_by!

  • uniq, uniq! (with block)

  • Complex

  • to_r

  • Dir

  • home

  • Enumerable

  • chunk

  • flat_map, collect_concat

  • join

  • slice_before

  • Float::INFINITY, NAN

  • Hash

  • keep_if, select!

  • Object

  • singleton_class

  • Random (new class)

Note: The methods of Random can't be required individually; the class can only be required whole with require 'backports/1.9.2/random'.

Ruby 1.9.1 backports

Additionally, the following Ruby 1.9 features have been backported:

  • Array

  • try_convert

  • sample

  • Enumerable

  • each_with_object

  • each_with_index (with arguments)

  • Enumerator

  • new (with block)

  • File

  • binread

  • to_path

  • All class methods accepting filenames will accept files or anything with a #to_path method.

  • File.open accepts an options hash.

  • Float

  • round

  • Hash

  • assoc, rassoc

  • key

  • try_convert

  • default_proc=

  • Integer

  • magnitude

  • round

  • IO

  • bin_read

  • try_convert

  • ungetbyte

  • IO.open accepts an options hash.

  • Kernel

  • require_relative

  • Math

  • log (with base)

  • log2

  • Numeric

  • round

  • Object

  • define_singleton_method

  • public_method

  • public_send

  • Proc

  • yield

  • lambda?

  • curry

  • ===

  • Range

  • cover?

  • Regexp

  • try_convert

  • String

  • ascii_only?

  • chr

  • clear

  • codepoints, each_codepoint

  • get_byte, set_byte

  • ord

  • try_convert

Enumerator can be accessed directly (instead of Enumerable::Enumerator)

To include only these backports and those of the 1.8 line, require "backports/1.9.1".

Moreover, a pretty good imitation of BasicObject is available, but since it is only an imitation, it must be required explicitly:

require 'backports/basic_object'

Ruby 1.8.7

Complete Ruby 1.8.7 backporting (core language). Refer to the official list of changes. That's about 130 backports!

Only exceptions:

  • String#gsub (the form returning an enumerator)
  • GC.stress= (not implemented)
  • Array#choice (removed in 1.9, use 1.9.1's Array#sample instead)

Libraries

Libraries were slowly being backported, but they are now available as separate gems.

The backports would be automatically used after requiring 'backports/std_lib' but this is now deprecated and discouraged.

The following libraries are up to date with Ruby 1.9.3:

  • Matrix
  • Prime
  • Set

The following library is to date with Ruby 2.0.0:

  • OpenStruct (ostruct)

I am aware of the following backport gem, which probably won't make it into this gem:

Requiring backports for a given version of Ruby will also load 'backports/std_lib'.

Forcing incompatibilities

Some backports would create incompatibilities in their current Ruby version but could be useful in some projects. It is possible to request such incompatible changes. Backports currently supports the following:

  • Hash

  • select (returns a Hash instead of an Array)

  • Enumerable / Array

  • map (returns an enumerator when called without a block)

  • String

  • length, size (for UTF-8 support)

These must be imported in addition to the backports gem, for example:

require "backports/force/hash_select"
{}.select{} # => {}, even in Ruby 1.8

Thanks

Thanks for the bug reports and patches, in particular the repeat offenders:

Contributing

The best way to submit a patch is to also submit a patch to ruby/spec and then a patch to backports that make it pass the spec.

See below to test rubyspec. Note that only features missing from your Ruby version are tested.

git submodule init && git submodule update # => pulls rubyspecs
bundle install
bundle exec rake spec[hash/slice]          # => tests Hash#slice  (must be in Ruby 2.4 or less)
bundle exec rake spec[hash/*]              # => tests all backported Hash methods
bundle exec rake spec  (or rake spec[*/*]) # => all rubyspecs for backported methods

Failures that are acceptable are added the to tags file.

License

backports is released under the terms of the MIT License, see the included LICENSE file.

Author : Marc-André Lafortune

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