Note: I've since updated this article with more details. You can read it on my blog at Concerns in Rails: Everything You Need to Know
Many Rails applications, including the framework itself, make heavy use of concerns. However, if you are just getting into Rails, concerns can be confusing to understand. Why do we need them, how do they work, and when do we use (or not use) them? When I started learning Rails a few months ago, concerns were one of the topics that took a long time for me to understand.
The Rails API documentation doesn't help, either. It starts with the assumption that the reader is already familiar with the problem concerns are trying to solve, and goes on to provide the solution, only adding to the confusion.
So I did some research and found the web has many interesting nuggets of concern wisdom scattered around, like this blog post from DHH demonstrating the usage of concerns, or these answers from the A May of WTFs thread from the Core Rails members explaining concerns with a metaphor of writing.
This blog post attempts to summarize these scattered pieces of information to paint a coherent picture, showing you how concerns can help you write better code.
Problem Concerns Solve
Using a concern lets you extract the common logic from different classes into a reusable module.
Consider the following two models: Post and Comment. In addition to the code specific to them, both models contain the code that handles their visibility, i.e. the visible_to
attribute, is_visible
instance method, and count_all_visible
class method. There could be many other models that need to control their visibility in a similar way. It would be nice if there was a way to abstract this code.
# post.rb
class Post < ApplicationRecord
belongs_to :author
has_many :comments, dependent: :delete_all
has_rich_text :content
validates :title, presence: true, length: { minimum: 2 }
validate :has_valid_content
attr_accessor :visible_to
def is_visible?
visible_to.present?
end
def has_valid_content
# some code
end
def self.count_all_visible
all.select { |item| item.is_visible? }
end
end
# comment.rb
class Comment < ApplicationRecord
belongs_to :post
validates :commenter, :body, presence: true
attr_accessor :visible_to
def is_visible?
visible_to.present?
end
def self.count_all_visible
all.select { |item| item.is_visible? }
end
end
What is a Concern?
A lot of concerns are simply Ruby modules that are mixed in, with no additional stuff added. And then for a few cases, like when your concern includes both class and instance methods, or you want to call class methods on mixin, you can use extend ActiveSupport::Concern. - DHH
A Rails Concern is a module that extends the ActiveSupport::Concern
module. Concerns allow us to include modules with methods (both instance and class) and constants into a class so that the including class can use them.
A concern provides two blocks:
-
included
- The code inside the included block is evaluated in the context of the including class. For example, if
Post
includes a concern, anything inside theincluded
block will be evaluated as if it was written insidePost
. - You can write class macros (validations, associations, scopes, etc.) here, and any methods become instance methods of the including class.
- The code inside the included block is evaluated in the context of the including class. For example, if
-
class_methods
- The methods added inside this block become the class methods on the including class.
- Instead of the
class_methods
block, you can create a nested module namedClassMethods
.
Here's a concern named Taggable.
module Taggable
extend ActiveSupport::Concern
included do
end
class_methods do
end
end
A concern is a module that you extract to split the implementation of a class or module in coherent chunks, instead of having one big class body. The API surface is the same one, they just help organize the code. A concern is a regular Ruby mixin, there’s nothing else, it is not a new concept. It is plain Ruby. - Xavier Noria
How to Use a Concern?
Let's create a Visible
concern to extract the visibility-related code from the Post
and Comment
models. In general, the Visible
concern deals with an entity's visibility, concerning if it is visible or not.
# visible.rb
module Visible
extend ActiveSupport::Concern
# The code inside the included block is evaluated
# in the context of the class that includes the Visible concern.
# You can write class macros here, and
# any methods become instance methods of the including class.
included do
attr_accessor :visible_to
def is_visible?
visible_to.present?
end
end
# The methods added inside the class_methods block (or, ClassMethods module)
# become the class methods on the including class.
class_methods do
def count_all_visible
all.select { |item| item.is_visible? }
end
end
end
To use this concern, you include the module as usual. For example, if the Post
model wanted the visibility
functionality, it would include the Visible
concern.
class Post
include Visible
end
Including this concern adds the visible_to
attribute, is_visible
instance method, and the count_all_visible
class method to the Post
class.
The following test illustrates this.
require "test_helper"
class PostTest < ActiveSupport::TestCase
test "Post can include the visible concern" do
post = Post.new
assert_not post.is_visible?
post.visible_to = "reader"
assert_equal "reader", post.visible_to
assert post.is_visible?
assert_equal [], Post.count_all_visible
end
end
Why do we need Concerns?
You might wonder: what's the point of all this cleverness? If we are trying to abstract some common behavior at a central location, can't we simply create a new class, encapsulating the query in a stand-alone object? And you'd be right.
You can create a class containing the shared code, instantiate it, and use it.
visibility_manager = Visibilty.new
visibility_manager.is_visible(post)
However, concerns are often just the right amount of abstraction, resulting in a friendlier API. All the methods you need are right there, on the primary object, and you don’t need to introduce an intermediate object like visibility_manager
to access the shared code.
Here's how DHH addresses this concern (no pun intended) ;)
So that’s another way of putting this: It’s a writing style. Like using subheads to explain subservient ideas within a broader context. You could probably extract all those subheads out, and turn them into little essays of their own. But that’s often just not the right level of extraction. As you saw, the Accessor role starts life as literally just two methods! It doesn’t warrant being turned into it’s own class. It doesn’t have an independent center of gravity. - A May of WTFs
That's what concerns are: A way to group related methods together, while still living under a single class.
It's structured writing.
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