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OO Ride Share

At a Glance

  • Pair, stage 2 project
  • Due before class, DATE HERE

Introduction

Remember the ride share exercise we did with designing and creating a system to track the ride share data from a CSV file? We did a lot of great work on creating arrays and hashes of data, but we've learned a lot since then!

Now, we're going to use our understanding of classes, methods and attributes to create an object-oriented ride share system that is much more robust than our previous implementation.

Learning Goals

  • Reinforce and practice Ruby programming fundamentals, particularly
    • Creating and instantiating classes with attributes
    • Using composition to connect different classes together
    • Working with files and large amounts of data
    • Writing pseudocode and creating tests to drive the creation of our code
  • Quickly become familiar with a large and complex code base
  • Use inheritance to extend existing classes

Objective

We will build a Ruby library that loads lists of passengers, trips and drivers from CSV files, provides methods for exploring this data, and provides a way to request a new trip.

We will not write an interactive command-line program.

Getting Started

We will use the same project structure we used for the previous project. Classes should be in files in the lib folder, and tests should be in files in the test folder. You will run tests by executing the rake command, as configured in a Rakefile.

The support folder contains CSV files which will drive your system design. Each CSV corresponds to a different type of object as well as creating a relationship between different objects.

Setup

  1. You'll be working with an assigned pair. High-five your pair.
  2. Choose one person to fork this repository in GitHub
  3. Add the person who didn't fork the repository as a collaborator.
  4. Both individuals will clone the forked repo: $ git clone [YOUR FORKED REPO URL]
  5. Both partners cd into their project directory
  6. Each partner should install Bundler with gem install bundler.
  7. Each partner should run bundle install, this command will read the Gemfile and install all the required gems (like rake!). If you are curious you can read more about gemfiles.
  8. Run rake to run the tests

Process

You should use the following process as much as possible:

  1. Write pseudocode
  2. Write test(s)
  3. Write code
  4. Refactor

Pair Plan

Come up with a "plan of action" for how you want to work as a pair. Discuss your learning style, how you prefer to receive feedback, and one team communication skill you want to improve with this experience. Second, review the requirements for Wave 1 and come up with a plan for your implementation.

Wave 0: Reading Code Requirements

This project comes with a large amount of scaffolding code already written. Before you start writing code, you and your partner should spend some time reading through what's here. Building a strong understanding now will make the rest of the project much smoother.

Wave 0 takes time. It is entirely reasonable to spend the first day of the project on Wave 0.

Tests

Start by running the tests:

$ rake test
... test output ...
Finished in 0.14685s
28 tests, 64 assertions, 0 failures, 0 errors, 1 skips

All the existing code is thoroughly tested. Some of the code you write for this project will break these tests; when that happens, it is your job to update them. When you add new functionality to this project, you should add new tests as well.

The tests can serve as an example of how the methods and classes should work. If you're ever confused about what one of these methods looks like "from the outside", the tests can serve as your guide.

Reading Code

The existing code contains 4 classes:

  • Passenger
  • Trip
  • CsvRecord
  • TripDispatcher

Before you go any further, think about how these classes might be related. Draw a diagram, if that will help. Your guess doesn't have to be correct at this stage - making a prediction and then checking it is an important part of the learning process. You can draw the diagram on paper or use an application such as app.diagrams.net which is free although it requires Google Drive.

Now, start reading through the code. There are two equally valid ways to approach this:

  • Top-down: start with the big pieces.
    • What classes are there, and how do they interact?
    • How does it look from the outside?
    • How are these classes tested?
  • Bottom-up: start with the details. Pick an interesting method (say Passenger.load_all) and learn everything about it.
    • What arguments does it take?
    • How does it work? If there's more than one step, what are they? Why are they in that order?
    • What other methods does call?
    • What does it return?
    • What code calls it, and how does it use the returned value?
    • How is it tested?

Playing Around

One of the most effective way to learn a new codebase is to use it. Since this code is a library not a program, there's nothing obvious to run from the command line, so we'll have to be a little clever. We can use pry to load the code, and then play with it in the interpreter:

$ pry -r ./lib/trip_dispatcher.rb
[1] pry(main)> td = RideShare::TripDispatcher.new
=> #<RideShare::TripDispatcher:0x3fe91f52950c>
[2] pry(main)> td.trips.length
=> 600

You could also create your own ruby file, for example driver.rb and create instances of the provided classes and experiment with the methods.

td = RideShare::TripDispatcher.new
puts "Trips length is #{td.trips.length}"
...

Comprehension Questions

Before you start writing code, you and your partner should use the above techniques and work together to answer the following questions. If you have questions or run into something that you can't figure out, consult with another group.

Classes and Relationships

  • What inheritance relations exist between classes?
  • What composition relations exist between classes?
  • Do these relations match your prediction from earlier?
  • Draw a class diagram that contains all of the above relations.

Code Details

  • Why doesn't Passenger or Trip need an attr_reader for id?
  • Why does the version of from_csv in CsvRecord raise a NotImplementedError? What does this mean? Why don't we hit that when we run the code?
  • Why is from_csv a private method?
  • How does CsvRecord.load_all know what CSV file to open?
  • When you call Passenger.load_all, what happens? What methods are called in what order?

Using the Library

Using the pry session we started above, how would you...

  • Print the rating for the first trip
  • Print the name of the passenger for trip 7
  • Print the ID of every trip taken by passenger 9
  • Print the ID of the trip that cost the most money

Implementation Requirements

Wave 1: Extending Existing Classes

The purpose of Wave 1 is to help you become familiar with the existing code, and to practice working with enumerables.

1.1: Upgrading Times

Currently our implementation saves the start and end time of each trip as a string. This is our first target for improvement. Instead of storing these values as strings, we will use Ruby's built-in Time class. You should:

  1. Spend some time reading the docs for Time - you might be particularly interested in Time.parse
  2. Modify Trip.from_csv to turn start_time and end_time into Time instances before passing them to Trip#initialize
  3. Add a check in Trip#initialize that raises an ArgumentError if the end time is before the start time, and a corresponding test
  4. Add an instance method to the Trip class to calculate the duration of the trip in seconds, and a corresponding test

Hint: If you're hitting a NoMethodError for Time.parse, be aware that you need to require 'time' in order for it to work.

1.2: Passenger Methods

Now that we have data for trip time stored in a more convenient way, we can do some interesting data processing. Each of these should be implemented as an instance method on Passenger.

  1. Add an instance method, net_expenditures, to Passenger that will return the total amount of money that passenger has spent on their trips
  2. Add an instance method, total_time_spent to Passenger that will return the total amount of time that passenger has spent on their trips

Each of these methods must have tests. What happens if the passenger has no trips?

Wave 2: Drivers

Our program needs a data type to represent Drivers in our service.

We will do this by creating a Driver class which inherits from CsvRecord, similar to Trip and Passenger. The constructor for Driver should take the following keyword arguments:

Attribute Description Rules
id Unique number for this driver Pass to the superclass constructor (similar to Passenger)
name This driver's name
vin The driver's Vehicle Identification Number (VIN) String of length 17. Raise an ArgumentError if it's the wrong length.
status Is this Driver available to drive? Must be one of :AVAILABLE or :UNAVAILABLE
trips A list of trips this driver has driven Optional, if not provided, initialize to an empty array (similar to Passenger)

Since Driver inherits from CsvRecord, you'll need to implement the from_csv template method. Once you do, Driver.load_all should work (test this in pry).

Use the provided tests to ensure that a Driver instance can be created successfully and that an ArgumentError is raised for an invalid status. Before the driver tests can work, you'll want to uncomment line 15 in test_helper.rb that looks like require_relative '../lib/driver' so that the tests can access the new class.

Updating Trip

To make use of the new Driver class we will need to update the Trip class to include a reference to the trip's driver. Add the following attributes to the Trip class.

Attribute Description
driver_id The ID of the driver for this trip
driver The Driver instance for the trip

When a Trip is constructed, either driver_id or driver must be provided.

Note: You have changed the method signature of the constructor for Trip. Some of your tests may now be failing. Go fix them!

Loading Drivers

Update the TripDispatcher class as follows:

  • In the constructor, call Driver.load_all and save the result in an instance variable
  • Update the Trip#connect method to connect the driver as well as the passenger (you'll want to create add trip on driver first - see below)
  • Add a find_driver method that looks up a driver by ID

Driver methods

After each Trip has a reference to its Driver and TripDispatcher can load a list of Drivers, add the following functionality to the Driver class:

Method Description Test Cases
add_trip Add a trip to the driver's list of trips Try adding a trip
average_rating What is this driver's average rating? What if there are no trips?

Does it handle floating point division correctly? For example the average of 2 and 3 should be 2.5, not 2.
total_revenue This method calculates that driver's total revenue across all their trips. Each driver gets 80% of the trip cost after a fee of $1.65 per trip is subtracted. What if there are no trips?

What if the cost of a trip was less that $1.65?

All the new methods above should have tests

Aside: More OO Design

Expand for musings on object-oriented design You may notice that `Driver` and `Passenger` share a lot of traits, especially the ability to work with a list of trips. If we were to flesh this library out more, you could imagine having a lot of repeated code. Addressing this problem is an interesting challenge.

One way we could DRY this up is through more inheritance (perhaps a TripTaker class), but inheritance is a little heavy-handed for our purposes. A more appropriate technique might be to use a module to include common behavior. This technique is called a mix-in and is something beyound the scope of what we'll learn at Ruby, but an interesting and useful technique.

For right now, we'll just let Passenger and Driver have some repeated code.

Wave 3: Requesting a Trip

Our program needs a way to make new trips and appropriately assign a driver and passenger.

This logic will be handled by our TripDispatcher in a new instance method: TripDispatcher#request_trip(passenger_id). When we create a new trip with this method, the following will be true:

  • The passenger ID will be supplied (this is the person requesting a trip)
  • Your code should automatically assign a driver to the trip
    • For this initial version, choose the first driver whose status is :AVAILABLE
  • Your code should use the current time for the start time
  • The end date, cost and rating will all be nil
    • The trip hasn't finished yet!

You should use this information to:

  • Create a new instance of Trip
  • Modify this selected driver using a new helper method in Driver:
    • Add the new trip to the collection of trips for that Driver
    • Set the driver's status to :UNAVAILABLE
  • Add the Trip to the Passenger's list of Trips
  • Add the new trip to the collection of all Trips in TripDispatcher
  • Return the newly created trip

All of this code must have tests. Things to pay attention to:

  • Was the trip created properly?
  • Were the trip lists for the driver and passenger updated?
  • Was the driver who was selected AVAILABLE?
  • What happens if you try to request a trip when there are no AVAILABLE drivers?

Interaction with Waves 1 & 2

One thing you may notice is that this change breaks your code from previous waves, possibly in subtle ways. We've added a new kind of trip, an in-progress trip, that is missing some of the values you need to compute those numbers.

Your code from waves 1 & 2 should ignore any in-progress trips. That is to say, any trip where the end time is nil should not be included in your totals.

You should also add explicit tests for this new situation. For example, what happens if you attempt to calculate the total money spent for a Passenger with an in-progress trip, or the average rating of a Driver with an in-progress trip?

Optional Wave 4: Intelligent Dispatching

This wave is optional! Don't even look at it until you're sure your code from the previous waves meets every requirement!

We want to evolve TripDispatcher so it assigns drivers in more intelligent ways. Every time we make a new trip, we want to pick drivers who haven't completed a trip in a long time, or who have never been assigned a trip.

In other words, we should assign the driver to the available driver who has never driven or lacking a new driver one whose most recent trip ending is the oldest compared to today.

Modify TripDispatcher#request_trip to use the following rules to select a Driver:

  • The Driver must have a status of AVAILABLE
  • The Driver must not have any in-progress trips (end time of nil)
  • From the Drivers that remain, select the one who has never driven or whose most recent trip ended the longest time ago

For example, if we have three drivers, each with two trips:

Driver Name Status Trip 1 end time Trip 2 end time
Ada AVAILABLE Jan 3, 2018 Jan 9, 2018
Katherine AVAILABLE Jan 1, 2018 Jan 12, 2018
Grace UNAVAILABLE Jan 5, 2018 nil

Grace is excluded because they are not AVAILABLE, and because they have one in-progress trip.

Of Ada and Katherine, we prefer Ada, because their most recent trip is older.

All of this code must have tests.

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