The code conventions of Rake
The words namespace
, desc
, task
, touch
, and so on in the Rakefile
are general methods and, of course, you are able to pass parentheses when you pass the parameters there, as shown in the following code snippet:
However, the code looks quite ugly now, so it's recommended that you avoid using styles such as the one used here. Rake has its own DSL, and if you follow it, the code will be more readable.
The namespace
and task
methods are the basic methods that accept blocks that make the Rake code very expressive. For the task
method, the block in the task definitions is optional, similar to what we saw in the Task dependencies – prerequisites section.
The blocks can be specified with either a do/end
pair or with curly braces in Ruby. To specify a Rakefile
, it's strongly recommended that you define rake tasks only with do/end
. Because the Rakefile
idiom tends to leave off parentheses on the tasks definitions, unusual ambiguities can arise when using curly braces. Take a look at the following proposed Rakefile
:
The following is the result of the execution of task1
:
The defined action in task1
is not evaluated. It leads to unexpected behavior. Because curly braces have a higher precedence than do/end
, the block is associated with the dependent_tasks
method rather than the task
method.
A variant of passing the block after the dependent task name is not valid Ruby code at all, as shown:
It might seem strange but unfortunately, this code doesn't work and gives a syntax error as shown:
The conclusion of this is that if you just follow the Rakefile
convention, you won't have problems with Rake's unexpected behavior.
Finally, the last tip for Rakefiles
description: don't use the new style of a hash definition in the task prerequisites (in other words, don't describe tasks dependencies like this: task1: :task2
). Often, only one prerequisite, defined at the first instance, transforms to the list of prerequisites and then you will have to translate the hash definition to the old style (in other words, the task1: :task2
code transforms to :task1 => [:task2, task3]
). Usually, all the task definitions contain the hash rocket instead of the colon notation. The conclusion here is simple: use the old style of the creation of Ruby hashes in the rake tasks definitions.