The Punch is an opinionated Ruby Code Generator for Business Logic Layer, built with principles The Clean Architecture and Domain Driven Design. Read Intro to gasp some basic ideas.
Install the gem and add to the application’s Gemfile by executing:
$ bundle add punch --git https://github.com/nvoynov/punch.git
Run the following command for basic usage:
$ punch
then punch a new project:
$ punch new DIRECTORY
$ cd DIRECTORY
then preview some commands:
$ punch preview service user-sing-up email
$ punch preview service user-sign-up email:email
$ punch preview entity user name email secret
$ punch preview plugin store
Proceed with customizing templates and “punching” previews when the result will match your expectations (by punching samples and customizing ./punch/samples/*.rb.erb)
$ punch samples
And maybe finally
$ punch basics
Advanced Stuff in DSL section
One can configure “punching” process by editing
punch.yml
that says which folder should be used for
services, entities, plugins. The defaults are:
lib: lib
test: test
domain:
sentries: sentries
entities: entities
services: services
plugins: plugins
I would recommend set “domain” property - it will structure sources in gem-like manner
Punch logs all commands and errors in punch.log
.
[2023-01-12 15:11:34 +0200] INFO : punch plugin store
[2023-01-12 15:11:34 +0200] INFO : lib/plugins/store.rb, lib/plugins.rb~, lib/, test/plugins/test_store.rb
The $ punch status
command provides you with basic info
about “punched” sources, like how many sources you have punched and how
many are still in the wild punched state.
When you need to store or send the report to someone else, you can use Pandoc and translate it into any supported format.
$ timespent | pandoc -s -f markdown -o report.html
Punch templates serves exactly to my own needs, but one customize it for its own purpose and shape. These templates are just ERB based on Punch::Decors::Model
$ punch samples
simplifying a bit, it’s quite simple things models
module Punch
module Models
Param = Data.define(:name, :sentry, :default, :desc)
Model = Data.define(:name, :params, :desc)
Plugin = Data.define(:name, :desc)
Sentry = Data.define(:name, :desc, :proc)
end
end
and decorator
module Punch
module Decors
class Model < Decor
def const; end
def namespace; end
def indentation; end
def open_namespace; end
def close_namespace;end
def regular_params; end
def keyword_params; end
def params_yardoc; end
def params_yarpro; end
def params_guard; end
def test_helper; end
end
end
end
When one satisfied with default templates to force the punched code work, one should furnish the project with Punch Basics - Service, Plugin, Sentry. The following command will bring it inside “lib/punch/basics” directory.
When one have some sort of domain requirements, understands actors and services, one could use describe the domain by DSL and generate the whole domain “at one punch”
$ punch domain
Look through sample.rb,
express your own and then generate it with dogen.rb
script.
NOTE besides the ruby code generation, the domain in quite interesting thing to generate whatever you want, like some sort of documentation, diagrams, etc. I generated SRS skeleton for Marko with actors, use cases, and entities.
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 the created tag, and push the
.gem
file to rubygems.org.
Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/[USERNAME]/punch.