Ruby String#Nameize Revised

This morning, Kevin Glowacz (@kevinglowacz) replied to me a few times on Twitter about Ruby String#Nameize class extension I had posted a while back.  I had done some work to it after posting it here.  Kevin also asked me a few questions about oddities that were in it that have since been resolved.  So thanks to his prodding, you get a slightly updated version…

The only real “feature” is that it will now handle full names just fine. Otherwise, the rest of the stuff was mostly performance related.  Here it is:

class String
  # Extension of the string class to properly handle camel names
  def nameize
    if self.match(/ /)
      # If the name has a space in it, we gotta run the parts through the nameizer.
      name = self.split(' ').each { |part| part.nameize! }.join(' ')
      return name
    elsif self.match(/^[A-Z]/)
      # If they took the time to capitalize their name then let's just jump out.
      return self
    else
      # If there are no spaces and there is no prior
      # capitalization then let's downcase the whole thing.
      name = self.downcase
    end
    # Let's now assume that they were lazy...
    return case
    when name.match(/^mac/)
      name.gsub(/^mac/, "").capitalize.insert(0, "Mac")
    when name.match(/^mc/)
      name.gsub(/^mc/, "").capitalize.insert(0, "Mc")
    when name.match(/^o\'/)
      name.split("'").each{ |piece| piece.capitalize! }.join("'")
    else
      name.capitalize # name is a first name or it's not Irish then capitalize it.
    end
  end

  def nameize!
    replace nameize # BANG!
  end

end

As always – question, comments, suggestions – shoot me an email, leave a comment, or hit me on Twitter (@PatrickTulskie).

Posted in Code, Software Development, ruby at December 30th, 2008. 5 Comments.

Every Friday we have our code reviews at BeenVerified and it is definitely a non-trivial event.  Our development team looks through the code all together and offers suggestions and ways to improve what the creator deems near-complete code.  Code reviews have become my favorite part of team based development because they offer me such a badass opportunity to learn more.  Everyone looks a problem differently and so getting insight from other people is huge because you might not consider all of your options when you’re knee deep in 1000 lines of ruby, CSS, and js all at once.

Yeah it’s great, except this Friday it didn’t happen.  Thanksgiving weekend happened instead so we pushed it to Monday.  Being the silly goose I am, I decided to get a new Macbook on Black Friday.  I restored my stuff from Time Machine, installed my Ruby Gems, and thought all was well.  Monday morning, my turn to present code came up and there was a problem with screen sharing.  Crap.  All of my code is in a git branch that is not pushed to a server yet and the time it would have taken to get to a state where we could present it from another machine would have been too much so we postponed my review until my screen sharing would work.  This was most displeasing to me. Read More…

Posted in Code, Software Development, Uncategorized, ruby at December 3rd, 2008. No Comments.

I decided to start writing a little series of articles based on the lessons I’ve learned in writing code the uses twitter, using twitter itself, and just generally getting the most out of it.  This is the first one, and maybe there will be more depending on how I like it.

The Problem – Why You Should Care

Other sites that you pull content from are not always going to be reliable.  They could be down, running slow, or some other possible problem.  If you are using something like twitter to display your status on your site but you have a lot of other content you want people to see then it would be wise to use client-side scripting to get the content.  You might be saying in your head “Oh but I have this sweet PHP script that does that for me.” but you should tell that voice in your head to shut up and just listen.

Read More…

Posted in Code, Social Media, Uncategorized at July 14th, 2008. No Comments.

GreaseMonkey for Newbs

I won’t sit here and proclaim myself to be some god of Grease Monkey but I do know a thing or two about Java Script.  Basically, for those of you who are clueless as to what Grease Monkey is, it’s a plugin for Firefox that allows you to manipulate certain pages you visit using Java Script.  Now that we know what it is and have tons of ideas flowing through our heads, let’s just do something kinda cool.

Today we’re going to beat up on certain gallery pages that use images of the format “imageName.sized.jpg”.  What I mean by this is – we’re going to take the page (which is usually filled with junk) and replace everything with just the full size image and the caption.

Let’s get some assumptions out of the way:
You know SOME Java Script, the site you’re visiting also has the non-sized images in the same directory as the sized images, and you don’t care what else is on the web page.  We’re also assuming there is only one caption with no “id” and we only have a style class to work with.

Ok?  Ok.  Let’s go.

Read More…

Posted in Code at June 22nd, 2008. No Comments.