RBS is a language to describe the structure of Ruby programs. You can write down the definition of a class or module: methods defined in the class, instance variables and their types, and inheritance/mix-in relations. It also allows declaring constants and global variables.
The following is a small example of RBS for a chat app.
module ChatApp
VERSION: String
class User
attr_reader login: String
attr_reader email: String
def initialize: (login: String, email: String) -> void
end
class Bot
attr_reader name: String
attr_reader email: String
attr_reader owner: User
def initialize: (name: String, owner: User) -> void
end
class Message
attr_reader id: String
attr_reader string: String
attr_reader from: User | Bot # `|` means union types: `#from` can be `User` or `Bot`
attr_reader reply_to: Message? # `?` means optional type: `#reply_to` can be `nil`
def initialize: (from: User | Bot, string: String) -> void
def reply: (from: User | Bot, string: String) -> Message
end
class Channel
attr_reader name: String
attr_reader messages: Array[Message]
attr_reader users: Array[User]
attr_reader bots: Array[Bot]
def initialize: (name: String) -> void
def each_member: () { (User | Bot) -> void } -> void # `{` and `}` means block.
| () -> Enumerator[User | Bot, void] # Method can be overloaded.
end
end
- The standard library signatures targets the latest release of Ruby. (
3.2
as of 2023.) - The library code targets non-EOL versions of Ruby. (
>= 3.0
as of 2023.)
Install the rbs
gem. $ gem install rbs
from the command line, or add a line in your Gemfile
.
gem "rbs"
The gem ships with the rbs
command line tool to demonstrate what it can do and help develop RBS.
$ rbs version
$ rbs list
$ rbs ancestors ::Object
$ rbs methods ::Object
$ rbs method Object then
An end user of rbs
will probably find rbs prototype
the most useful. This command generates boilerplate signature declarations for ruby files. For example, say you have written the below ruby script.
# person.rb
class Person
attr_reader :name
attr_reader :contacts
def initialize(name:)
@name = name
@contacts = []
end
def speak
"I'm #{@name} and I love Ruby!"
end
end
Running prototype on the above will automatically generate
$ rbs prototype rb person.rb
class Person
@name: untyped
@contacts: untyped
attr_reader name: untyped
attr_reader contacts: untyped
def initialize: (name: untyped) -> void
def speak: () -> ::String
end
It prints signatures for all methods, classes, instance variables, and constants. This is only a starting point, and you should edit the output to match your signature more accurately.
rbs prototype
offers three options.
-
rb
generates from just the available Ruby code -
rbi
generates from Sorbet RBI -
runtime
generates from runtime API
There are two important concepts, environment and definition.
An environment is a dictionary that keeps track of all declarations. What is the declaration associated with String
class? An environment will give you the answer.
A definition gives you the detail of the class. What is the type of the return value of gsub
method of the String
class? The definition for String
class knows the list of methods it provides and their types.
The following is a small code to retrieve the definition of the String#gsub
method.
require "rbs"
loader = RBS::EnvironmentLoader.new()
# loader.add(path: Pathname("sig")) # Load .rbs files from `sig` directory
# loader.add(library: "pathname") # Load pathname library
environment = RBS::Environment.from_loader(loader).resolve_type_names
# ::String
string = RBS::TypeName.new(name: :String, namespace: RBS::Namespace.root)
# Class declaration for ::String
decl = environment.class_decls[string]
# Builder provides the translation from `declaration` to `definition`
builder = RBS::DefinitionBuilder.new(env: environment)
# Definition of instance of String
instance = builder.build_instance(string)
# Print the types of `gsub` method:
puts instance.methods[:gsub].method_types.join("\n")
# Outputs =>
# (::Regexp | ::string pattern, ::string replacement) -> ::String
# (::Regexp | ::string pattern, ::Hash[::String, ::String] hash) -> ::String
# (::Regexp | ::string pattern) { (::String match) -> ::_ToS } -> ::String
# (::Regexp | ::string pattern) -> ::Enumerator[::String, self]
# Definition of singleton of String
singleton = builder.build_singleton(string)
# No `gsub` method for String singleton
puts singleton.methods[:gsub]
- Architecture
- Core and standard library signature contribution guide
- Writing signatures guide
- Stdlib signatures guide
- Syntax
- RBS by Example
- RBS collection
- Using
Data
andStruct
- Releasing a gem with RBS
Here is a list of some places you can talk with active maintainers.
-
Ruby Discord Server (invite link) -- We have
rbs
channel in Ruby Discord server. -
ruby-jp Slack Workspace (in Japanese) -- We have
types
channel in ruby-jp slack workspace. - gem_rbs_collection -- We have a repository of third-party RBS type definitions, for the case your dependency doesn't ship with RBS files.
After checking out the repo, run bin/setup
to install dependencies. Then, run bundle exec 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.
Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/ruby/rbs.