= ImmutableStruct {Build Status}[https://travis-ci.org/stitchfix/immutable-struct] Creates struct-like classes (that can build value objects) that do not have setters and also have better constructors than Ruby's built-in +Struct+. This is highly useful for creating presenters, non-database-related models, or other quick and dirty classes in your application. Instead of using a +Hash+ or +OpenStruct+, you can create a bit more clarity around your types by using +ImmutableStruct+, which is almost as convienient. == Install Add to your +Gemfile+: gem 'immutable-struct' Then install: bundle install If not using bundler, just use RubyGems: gem install immutable-struct == To use Person = ImmutableStruct.new(:name, :age, :job, :active?, [:addresses]) do def minor? age < 18 end end p = Person.new(name: "Dave", # name will be 'Dave' age: 40, # age will be 40 # job is omitted, so will be nil active: true) # active and active? will be true # addresses is omitted, but since we've selected # Array coercion, it'll be [] p.name # => "Dave" p.age # => 40 p.active? # => true p.minor? # => false p.addresses # => [] p2 = Person.new(name: "Dave", age: 40, active: true) p == p2 # => true p.eql?(p2) # => true SimilarPerson = ImmutableStruct.new(:name, :age, :job, :active?, [:addresses]) sp = SimilarPerson.new(name: "Dave", age: 40, active: true) p == sp # => false # Different class leads to inequality new_person = p.merge(name: "Other Dave", age: 41) # returns a new object with merged attributes new_person.name # => "Other Dave" new_person.age # => 41 new_person.active? # => true You can also treat the interior as a normal class definition. == Links * rdoc[http://stitchfix.github.io/immutable-struct] * source[http://github.com/stitchfix/immutable-struct] * blog[http://technology.stitchfix.com/blog/2013/12/20/presenters-delegation-vs-structs/]