| name | andrew-kane-gem-writer |
| description | Write Ruby gems following Andrew Kane's proven patterns and philosophy. Use when creating new Ruby gems, refactoring existing gems, designing gem APIs, or when the user wants clean, minimal, production-ready Ruby library code. Triggers on requests like "create a gem", "write a Ruby library", "design a gem API", or mentions of Andrew Kane's style. |
Andrew Kane Gem Writer
Write Ruby gems following Andrew Kane's battle-tested patterns from 100+ gems with 374M+ downloads (Searchkick, PgHero, Chartkick, Strong Migrations, Lockbox, Ahoy, Blazer, Groupdate, Neighbor, Blind Index).
Core Philosophy
Simplicity over cleverness. Zero or minimal dependencies. Explicit code over metaprogramming. Rails integration without Rails coupling. Every pattern serves production use cases.
Entry Point Structure
Every gem follows this exact pattern in lib/gemname.rb:
require "forwardable"
require_relative "gemname/model"
require_relative "gemname/version"
require_relative "gemname/railtie" if defined?(Rails)
module GemName
class Error < StandardError; end
class InvalidConfigError < Error; end
class << self
attr_accessor :timeout, :logger
attr_writer :client
end
self.timeout = 10
end
Class Macro DSL Pattern
The signature Kane pattern—single method call configures everything:
class Product < ApplicationRecord
searchkick word_start: [:name]
end
module GemName
module Model
def gemname(**options)
unknown = options.keys - KNOWN_KEYWORDS
raise ArgumentError, "unknown keywords: #{unknown.join(", ")}" if unknown.any?
mod = Module.new
mod.module_eval do
define_method :some_method do
end unless method_defined?(:some_method)
end
include mod
class_eval do
cattr_reader :gemname_options, instance_reader: false
class_variable_set :@@gemname_options, options.dup
end
end
end
end
Rails Integration
Always use ActiveSupport.on_load—never require Rails gems directly:
require "active_record"
ActiveRecord::Base.include(MyGem::Model)
ActiveSupport.on_load(:active_record) do
extend GemName::Model
end
ActiveSupport.on_load(:active_record) do
ActiveRecord::Migration.prepend(GemName::Migration)
end
Configuration Pattern
Use class << self with attr_accessor, not Configuration objects:
module GemName
class << self
attr_accessor :timeout, :logger
attr_writer :master_key
end
def self.master_key
@master_key ||= ENV["GEMNAME_MASTER_KEY"]
end
self.timeout = 10
self.logger = nil
end
Error Handling
Simple hierarchy with informative messages:
module GemName
class Error < StandardError; end
class ConfigError < Error; end
class ValidationError < Error; end
end
def initialize(key:)
raise ArgumentError, "Key must be 32 bytes" unless key&.bytesize == 32
end
Testing (Minitest Only)
require "bundler/setup"
Bundler.require(:default)
require "minitest/autorun"
require "minitest/pride"
class ModelTest < Minitest::Test
def test_basic_functionality
assert_equal expected, actual
end
end
Gemspec Pattern
Zero runtime dependencies when possible:
Gem::Specification.new do |spec|
spec.name = "gemname"
spec.version = GemName::VERSION
spec.required_ruby_version = ">= 3.1"
spec.files = Dir["*.{md,txt}", "{lib}/**/*"]
spec.require_path = "lib"
end
Anti-Patterns to Avoid
method_missing (use define_method instead)
- Configuration objects (use class accessors)
@@class_variables (use class << self)
- Requiring Rails gems directly
- Many runtime dependencies
- Committing Gemfile.lock in gems
- RSpec (use Minitest)
- Heavy DSLs (prefer explicit Ruby)
Reference Files
For deeper patterns, see: