Observer
The Observer pattern (also known as publish/subscribe) provides a simple mechanism for one object to inform a set of interested third-party objects when its state changes.
Mechanism
The notifying class mixes in the Observable
module, which provides the methods for managing the associated observer
objects.
The observable object must:
- assert that it has
#changed
- call
#notify_observers
An observer subscribes to updates using Observable#add_observer, which also specifies the method called via #notify_observers. The default method for notify_observers is #update.
Installation
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'observer'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install observer
Usage
The following example demonstrates this nicely. A Ticker
, when run,
continually receives the stock Price
for its @symbol. A Warner
is a general observer of the price, and two warners are demonstrated, a
WarnLow
and a WarnHigh
, which print a warning if the price is below or
above their set limits, respectively.
The update
callback allows the warners to run without being explicitly
called. The system is set up with the Ticker
and several observers, and the
observers do their duty without the top-level code having to interfere.
Note that the contract between publisher and subscriber (observable and
observer) is not declared or enforced. The Ticker
publishes a time and a
price, and the warners receive that. But if you don't ensure that your
contracts are correct, nothing else can warn you.
require "observer"
class Ticker ### Periodically fetch a stock price.
include Observable
def initialize(symbol)
@symbol = symbol
end
def run
last_price = nil
loop do
price = Price.fetch(@symbol)
print "Current price: #{price}\n"
if price != last_price
changed # notify observers
last_price = price
notify_observers(Time.now, price)
end
sleep 1
end
end
end
class Price ### A mock class to fetch a stock price (60 - 140).
def self.fetch(symbol)
60 + rand(80)
end
end
class Warner ### An abstract observer of Ticker objects.
def initialize(ticker, limit)
@limit = limit
ticker.add_observer(self)
end
end
class WarnLow < Warner
def update(time, price) # callback for observer
if price < @limit
print "--- #{time.to_s}: Price below #@limit: #{price}\n"
end
end
end
class WarnHigh < Warner
def update(time, price) # callback for observer
if price > @limit
print "+++ #{time.to_s}: Price above #@limit: #{price}\n"
end
end
end
ticker = Ticker.new("MSFT")
WarnLow.new(ticker, 80)
WarnHigh.new(ticker, 120)
ticker.run
Produces:
Current price: 83
Current price: 75
--- Sun Jun 09 00:10:25 CDT 2002: Price below 80: 75
Current price: 90
Current price: 134
+++ Sun Jun 09 00:10:25 CDT 2002: Price above 120: 134
Current price: 134
Current price: 112
Current price: 79
--- Sun Jun 09 00:10:25 CDT 2002: Price below 80: 79
Development
After checking out the repo, run bin/setup
to install dependencies. Then, run rake test
to run the tests. You can also run bin/console
for an interactive prompt that will allow you to experiment.
To install this gem onto your local machine, run bundle exec rake install
. To release a new version, update the version number in version.rb
, and then run bundle exec rake release
, which will create a git tag for the version, push git commits and tags, and push the .gem
file to rubygems.org.
Contributing
Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/ruby/observer.