问题
In Ruby 1.8, there are subtle differences between proc/lambda on the one hand, and Proc.new
on the other.
- What are those differences?
- Can you give guidelines on how to decide which one to choose?
- In Ruby 1.9, proc and lambda are different. What\'s the deal?
回答1:
Another important but subtle difference between procs created with lambda
and procs created with Proc.new
is how they handle the return
statement:
- In a
lambda
-created proc, thereturn
statement returns only from the proc itself - In a
Proc.new
-created proc, thereturn
statement is a little more surprising: it returns control not just from the proc, but also from the method enclosing the proc!
Here's lambda
-created proc's return
in action. It behaves in a way that you probably expect:
def whowouldwin
mylambda = lambda {return "Freddy"}
mylambda.call
# mylambda gets called and returns "Freddy", and execution
# continues on the next line
return "Jason"
end
whowouldwin
#=> "Jason"
Now here's a Proc.new
-created proc's return
doing the same thing. You're about to see one of those cases where Ruby breaks the much-vaunted Principle of Least Surprise:
def whowouldwin2
myproc = Proc.new {return "Freddy"}
myproc.call
# myproc gets called and returns "Freddy",
# but also returns control from whowhouldwin2!
# The line below *never* gets executed.
return "Jason"
end
whowouldwin2
#=> "Freddy"
Thanks to this surprising behavior (as well as less typing), I tend to favor using lambda
over Proc.new
when making procs.
回答2:
To provide further clarification:
Joey says that the return behavior of Proc.new
is surprising. However when you consider that Proc.new behaves like a block this is not surprising as that is exactly how blocks behave. lambas on the other hand behave more like methods.
This actually explains why Procs are flexible when it comes to arity (number of arguments) whereas lambdas are not. Blocks don't require all their arguments to be provided but methods do (unless a default is provided). While providing lambda argument default is not an option in Ruby 1.8, it is now supported in Ruby 1.9 with the alternative lambda syntax (as noted by webmat):
concat = ->(a, b=2){ "#{a}#{b}" }
concat.call(4,5) # => "45"
concat.call(1) # => "12"
And Michiel de Mare (the OP) is incorrect about the Procs and lambda behaving the same with arity in Ruby 1.9. I have verified that they still maintain the behavior from 1.8 as specified above.
break
statements don't actually make much sense in either Procs or lambdas. In Procs, the break would return you from Proc.new which has already been completed. And it doesn't make any sense to break from a lambda since it's essentially a method, and you would never break from the top level of a method.
next
, redo
, and raise
behave the same in both Procs and lambdas. Whereas retry
is not allowed in either and will raise an exception.
And finally, the proc
method should never be used as it is inconsistent and has unexpected behavior. In Ruby 1.8 it actually returns a lambda! In Ruby 1.9 this has been fixed and it returns a Proc. If you want to create a Proc, stick with Proc.new
.
For more information, I highly recommend O'Reilly's The Ruby Programming Language which is my source for most of this information.
回答3:
I found this page which shows what the difference between Proc.new
and lambda
are. According to the page, the only difference is that a lambda is strict about the number of arguments it accepts, whereas Proc.new
converts missing arguments to nil
. Here is an example IRB session illustrating the difference:
irb(main):001:0> l = lambda { |x, y| x + y } => #<Proc:0x00007fc605ec0748@(irb):1> irb(main):002:0> p = Proc.new { |x, y| x + y } => #<Proc:0x00007fc605ea8698@(irb):2> irb(main):003:0> l.call "hello", "world" => "helloworld" irb(main):004:0> p.call "hello", "world" => "helloworld" irb(main):005:0> l.call "hello" ArgumentError: wrong number of arguments (1 for 2) from (irb):1 from (irb):5:in `call' from (irb):5 from :0 irb(main):006:0> p.call "hello" TypeError: can't convert nil into String from (irb):2:in `+' from (irb):2 from (irb):6:in `call' from (irb):6 from :0
The page also recommends using lambda unless you specifically want the error tolerant behavior. I agree with this sentiment. Using a lambda seems a tad more concise, and with such an insignificant difference, it seems the better choice in the average situation.
As for Ruby 1.9, sorry, I haven't looked into 1.9 yet, but I don't imagine they would change it all that much (don't take my word for it though, it seems you have heard of some changes, so I am probably wrong there).
回答4:
Proc is older, but the semantics of return are highly counterintuitive to me (at least when I was learning the language) because:
- If you are using proc, you are most likely using some kind of functional paradigm.
- Proc can return out of the enclosing scope (see previous responses), which is a goto basically, and highly non-functional in nature.
Lambda is functionally safer and easier to reason about - I always use it instead of proc.
回答5:
I can't say much about the subtle differences. However, I can point out that Ruby 1.9 now allows optional parameters for lambdas and blocks.
Here's the new syntax for the stabby lambdas under 1.9:
stabby = ->(msg='inside the stabby lambda') { puts msg }
Ruby 1.8 didn't have that syntax. Neither did the conventional way of declaring blocks/lambdas support optional args:
# under 1.8
l = lambda { |msg = 'inside the stabby lambda'| puts msg }
SyntaxError: compile error
(irb):1: syntax error, unexpected '=', expecting tCOLON2 or '[' or '.'
l = lambda { |msg = 'inside the stabby lambda'| puts msg }
Ruby 1.9, however, supports optional arguments even with the old syntax:
l = lambda { |msg = 'inside the regular lambda'| puts msg }
#=> #<Proc:0x0e5dbc@(irb):1 (lambda)>
l.call
#=> inside the regular lambda
l.call('jeez')
#=> jeez
If you wanna build Ruby1.9 for Leopard or Linux, check out this article (shameless self promotion).
回答6:
Short answer: What matters is what return
does: lambda returns out of itself, and proc returns out of itself AND the function that called it.
What is less clear is why you want to use each. lambda is what we expect things should do in a functional programming sense. It is basically an anonymous method with the current scope automatically bound. Of the two, lambda is the one you should probably be using.
Proc, on the other hand, is really useful for implementing the language itself. For example you can implement "if" statements or "for" loops with them. Any return found in the proc will return out of the method that called it, not the just the "if" statement. This is how languages work, how "if" statements work, so my guess is Ruby uses this under the covers and they just exposed it because it seemed powerful.
You would only really need this if you are creating new language constructs like loops, if-else constructs, etc.
回答7:
A good way to see it is that lambdas are executed in their own scope (as if it was a method call), while Procs may be viewed as executed inline with the calling method, at least that's a good way of deciding wich one to use in each case.
回答8:
I didn't notice any comments on the third method in the queston, "proc" which is deprecated, but handled differently in 1.8 and 1.9.
Here's a fairly verbose example that makes it easy to see the differences between the three similar calls:
def meth1
puts "method start"
pr = lambda { return }
pr.call
puts "method end"
end
def meth2
puts "method start"
pr = Proc.new { return }
pr.call
puts "method end"
end
def meth3
puts "method start"
pr = proc { return }
pr.call
puts "method end"
end
puts "Using lambda"
meth1
puts "--------"
puts "using Proc.new"
meth2
puts "--------"
puts "using proc"
meth3
回答9:
Closures in Ruby is a good overview for how blocks, lambda and proc work in Ruby, with Ruby.
回答10:
lambda works as expected, like in other languages.
The wired Proc.new
is surprising and confusing.
The return
statement in proc created by Proc.new
will not only return control just from itself, but also from the method enclosing it.
def some_method
myproc = Proc.new {return "End."}
myproc.call
# Any code below will not get executed!
# ...
end
You can argue that Proc.new
inserts code into the enclosing method, just like block.
But Proc.new
creates an object, while block are part of an object.
And there is another difference between lambda and Proc.new
, which is their handling of (wrong) arguments.
lambda complains about it, while Proc.new
ignores extra arguments or considers the absence of arguments as nil.
irb(main):021:0> l = -> (x) { x.to_s }
=> #<Proc:0x8b63750@(irb):21 (lambda)>
irb(main):022:0> p = Proc.new { |x| x.to_s}
=> #<Proc:0x8b59494@(irb):22>
irb(main):025:0> l.call
ArgumentError: wrong number of arguments (0 for 1)
from (irb):21:in `block in irb_binding'
from (irb):25:in `call'
from (irb):25
from /usr/bin/irb:11:in `<main>'
irb(main):026:0> p.call
=> ""
irb(main):049:0> l.call 1, 2
ArgumentError: wrong number of arguments (2 for 1)
from (irb):47:in `block in irb_binding'
from (irb):49:in `call'
from (irb):49
from /usr/bin/irb:11:in `<main>'
irb(main):050:0> p.call 1, 2
=> "1"
BTW, proc
in Ruby 1.8 creates a lambda, while in Ruby 1.9+ behaves like Proc.new
, which is really confusing.
回答11:
To elaborate on Accordion Guy's response:
Notice that Proc.new
creates a proc out by being passed a block. I believe that lambda {...}
is parsed as a sort of literal, rather than a method call which passes a block. return
ing from inside a block attached to a method call will return from the method, not the block, and the Proc.new
case is an example of this at play.
(This is 1.8. I don't know how this translates to 1.9.)
回答12:
I am a bit late on this, but there is one great but little known thing about Proc.new
not mentioned in comments at all. As by documentation:
Proc::new
may be called without a block only within a method with an attached block, in which case that block is converted to theProc
object.
That said, Proc.new
lets to chain yielding methods:
def m1
yield 'Finally!' if block_given?
end
def m2
m1 &Proc.new
end
m2 { |e| puts e }
#⇒ Finally!
回答13:
The difference in behaviour with return
is IMHO the most important difference between the 2. I also prefer lambda because it's less typing than Proc.new :-)
回答14:
It's worth emphasizing that return
in a proc returns from the lexically enclosing method, i.e. the method where the proc was created, not the method that called the proc. This is a consequence of the closure property of procs. So the following code outputs nothing:
def foo
proc = Proc.new{return}
foobar(proc)
puts 'foo'
end
def foobar(proc)
proc.call
puts 'foobar'
end
foo
Although the proc executes in foobar
, it was created in foo
and so the return
exits foo
, not just foobar
. As Charles Caldwell wrote above, it has a GOTO feel to it. In my opinion, return
is fine in a block that is executed in its lexical context, but is much less intuitive when used in a proc that is executed in a different context.
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/626/when-to-use-lambda-when-to-use-proc-new