Steep - Gradual Typing for Ruby
Installation
Install via RubyGems.
$ gem install steep
Requirements
Steep requires Ruby 2.5.
Usage
Steep does not infer types from Ruby programs, but requires declaring types and writing annotations.
You have to go on the following three steps.
1. Declare Types
Declare types in .rbi
files in sig
directory.
class Person @name: String @contacts: Array def initialize: (name: String) -> any def name: -> String def contacts: -> Array def guess_country: -> (String | nil) end class Email @address: String def initialize: (address: String) -> any def address: -> String end class Phone @country: String @number: String def initialize: (country: String, number: String) -> any def country: -> String def number: -> String def self.countries: -> Hash end
- You can use simple generics, like
Hash
. - You can use union types, like
Email | Phone
. - You have to declare not only public methods but also private methods and instance variables.
- You can declare singleton methods, like
self.countries
. - There is
nil
type to represent nullable types.
2. Write Ruby Code
Write Ruby code with annotations.
class Person # `@dynamic` annotation is to tell steep that # the `name` and `contacts` methods are defined without def syntax. # (Steep can skip checking if the methods are implemented.) # @dynamic name, contacts attr_reader :name attr_reader :contacts def initialize(name:) @name = name @contacts = [] end def guess_country() contacts.map do |contact| # With case expression, simple type-case is implemented. # `contact` has type of `Phone | Email` but in the `when` clause, contact has type of `Phone`. case contact when Phone contact.country end end.compact.first end end class Email # @dynamic address attr_reader :address def initialize(address:) @address = address end def ==(other) # `other` has type of `any`, which means type checking is skipped. # No type errors can be detected in this method. other.is_a?(self.class) && other.address == address end def hash self.class.hash ^ address.hash end end class Phone # @dynamic country, number def initialize(country:, number:) @country = country @number = number end def ==(other) # You cannot use `case` for type case because `other` has type of `any`, not a union type. # You have to explicitly declare the type of `other` in `if` expression. if other.is_a?(Phone) # @type var other: Phone other.country == country && other.number == number end end def hash self.class.hash ^ country.hash ^ number.hash end end
3. Type Check
Run steep check
command to type check. 💡
$ steep check lib lib/phone.rb:46:0: MethodDefinitionMissing: module=::Phone, method=self.countries (class Phone)
You now find Phone.countries
method is not implemented yet. 🙃
Scaffolding
You can use steep scaffold
command to generate a signature declaration.
$ steep scaffold lib/*.rb class Person @name: any @contacts: Array def initialize: (name: any) -> Array def guess_country: () -> any end class Email @address: any def initialize: (address: any) -> any def ==: (any) -> any def hash: () -> any end class Phone @country: any @number: any def initialize: (country: any, number: any) -> any def ==: (any) -> void def hash: () -> any end
It prints all methods, classes, instance variables, and constants.
It can be a good starting point to writing signatures.
Because it just prints all def
s, you may find some odd points:
- The type of
initialize
inPerson
looks strange. - There are no
attr_reader
methods extracted.
Generally, these are by our design.
Commandline
steep check
is the command to run type checking.
Signature Directory
Use -I
option to specify signature file or signature directory.
$ steep check -I my-types.rbi test.rb
If you don’t specify -I
option, it assumes sig
directory.
Detecting Fallback
When Steep finds an expression which cannot be typed, it assumes the type of the node is any.
any type does not raise any type error so that fallback to any may hide some type errors.
Using --fallback-any-is-error
option prints the fallbacks.
$ steep check –fallback-any-is-error test.rb
Dump All Types
When you are debugging, printing all types of all node in the source code may help.
Use --dump-all-types
for that.
$ steep check –dump-all-types test.rb
Verbose option
Try -v
option to report more information about type checking.
Examples
You can find examples in smoke
directory.
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/soutaro/steep.