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Feature #9025

closed

Clarify the error message when calling a method with the wrong number of arguments

Added by Nerian (Gonzalo Rodríguez) over 10 years ago. Updated over 8 years ago.

Status:
Closed
Assignee:
-
Target version:
-
[ruby-core:<unknown>]

Description

Currently when calling a method with the wrong number of arguments we get a confusing error message:

ArgumentError: wrong number of arguments (1 for 0)

That means that the method was meant to accept 0 arguments, but 1 was provided instead. This error message is confusing, and a large number of people had to search for its meaning. For example [1] has 11000 views.

I propose that we change the error message to something whose meaning is obvious. Examples:

  • ArgumentError: wrong number of arguments (expected: 1, provided: 0)
  • ArgumentError: wrong number of arguments (1 instead of 0)

This ticket originated from this pull request: https://github.com/ruby/ruby/pull/367

[1] http://stackoverflow.com/questions/7537450/what-does-wrong-number-of-arguments-1-for-0-mean-in-ruby


Related issues 1 (0 open1 closed)

Related to Ruby master - Bug #11617: Fix tests for Feature 9025Closednobu (Nobuyoshi Nakada)Actions

Updated by sawa (Tsuyoshi Sawada) over 10 years ago

"instead of" is even worse than "for". It is ambiguous: "1 argument was given instead of the expected 0" or "1 argument should be given instead of 0 that was given". "for" at least does not have that ambiguity.

Updated by fuadksd (Fuad Saud) over 10 years ago

I like the "expected" wording. Also, wouldn't help a little to print the method name? May help to identify what's wrong faster.

--
Fuad Saud
Sent with Sparrow (http://www.sparrowmailapp.com/?sig)

Updated by phluid61 (Matthew Kerwin) over 10 years ago

This is sort of a bike-shedding issue, and I'm always happy to throw paint at bike sheds!

In the past, in various languages and environments, I've tended to use:
"wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 0)"

However, note that that StackOverflow question only has 9 upvotes. Other questions from the user are things like "What does the “+=” operator do in Java?", and a couple of spoon-feedy "please fix/explain this code" questions. While I agree that it would be nice to support ruby newbies with nice meaningful errors, I believe that the current message already conveys all the information required to comprehend it. Critically "wrong number of arguments" is pretty universal for programmers, even without relying on English per se, and the smallest amount of debugging will show that one of those numbers corresponds with the invocation causing the error, and therefore the other number must be the correct "number of arguments" for that method.

Updated by phluid61 (Matthew Kerwin) over 10 years ago

fuadksd (Fuad Saud) wrote:

I like the "expected" wording. Also, wouldn't help a little to print the method name? May help to identify what's wrong faster.

The first line of the error's backtrace gives the filename and line number of the bad call. If that line has so many method calls that you can't work out which one is wrong, perhaps that is the true cause of the error.

Updated by fuadksd (Fuad Saud) over 10 years ago

Maybe. Sometimes, if you do chain a couple of methods, you may get confused. I'm not saying there's no way you can figure out what's happening in the current situation, I just feel like the method name belongs here, as it belongs in NoMethodError messages.

Actions #6

Updated by duerst (Martin Dürst) over 10 years ago

phluid61 (Matthew Kerwin) wrote:

This is sort of a bike-shedding issue, and I'm always happy to throw paint at bike sheds!

In the past, in various languages and environments, I've tended to use:
"wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 0)"

That's a good way to put it, and very close to Nerian's
ArgumentError: wrong number of arguments (expected: 1, provided: 0)
(close enough to really just be bikeshedding)

While I agree that it would be nice to support ruby newbies with nice meaningful errors, I believe that the current message already conveys all the information required to comprehend it. Critically "wrong number of arguments" is pretty universal for programmers, even without relying on English per se, and the smallest amount of debugging will show that one of those numbers corresponds with the invocation causing the error, and therefore the other number must be the correct "number of arguments" for that method.

Ruby is all about making it easier for the programmer. Even the smallest amount of debugging is too much when it can be eliminated by tweaking the error message. This is definitely finetuning, but it's not bikeshedding.

Updated by phluid61 (Matthew Kerwin) over 10 years ago

duerst (Martin Dürst) wrote:

phluid61 (Matthew Kerwin) wrote:

[...] I believe that the current message already conveys all the information required to comprehend it. [...] the smallest amount of debugging will show [...]

Ruby is all about making it easier for the programmer. Even the smallest amount of debugging is too much when it can be eliminated by tweaking the error message.

I think that statement accidentally reached a point of absurdity by using a very precise definition of "debugging" that I don't share.

My argument is that the programmer still has to visit the erroneous line of code, inspect it, and probably modify it to have the correct number of arguments. That amount of debugging is always required, and would be if the error message said "ArgumentError" or "ArgumentError: the method `freb' on a String object does not accept any arguments, however it was passed a Fixnum".

I agree that someone not familiar with more technical English writing might be confused by the "(1 for 0)" part, but only when reading it in isolation. If the programmer sees the message, they have to fix it, in which case they are already in the code and can understand the message using contextual information (e.g. how many arguments there are in the call, what the API docs say about the function's arity and semantics, etc.); if an end user sees the message, they don't have to understand it and couldn't do anything about it if they did, they just pass it on to the programmer verbatim as a bug report.

Updated by robb (Robb Shecter) over 8 years ago

"(expected: 1, provided: 0)" is excellent. This is a big usability issue. Python's message is similar, and includes the function name:

TypeError: fun() takes exactly 1 argument (0 given)

I agree that someone not familiar with more technical English writing might be confused by the "(1 for 0)" part, but only when reading it in isolation.

My experience is different. I have a computer science degree and 20 years' of experience, and I'm always frustrated by this error message. I'm never clear on which number is which. I even got it wrong a few minutes ago in a comment I left here: "Request for comments about error messages" https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/11295

I program in many languages, and I don't have the mental capacity to remember idiosyncracies like this. Finally, consider the Python example, above. This is how modern languages perform, and users' expectations are rightly geared to match.

Ruby's dynamic nature defeats mere static analysis which you suggest would fix this: looking at one's code, it is not always possible to know how many arguments were passed.

I'll submit a Pull Request in order to make the conversation more concrete.

Updated by duerst (Martin Dürst) over 8 years ago

Matthew Kerwin wrote:

duerst (Martin Dürst) wrote:

Ruby is all about making it easier for the programmer. Even the smallest amount of debugging is too much when it can be eliminated by tweaking the error message.

I think that statement accidentally reached a point of absurdity by using a very precise definition of "debugging" that I don't share.

It might have been clearer for me to write "Even the smallest reduction in the amount of debugging is worth it when it can be achieved by tweaking the error message."

Anyway, if it doesn't make life easier for you, that's no problem. It won't hurt you, and it will help others, even if you might not believe it.

Updated by phluid61 (Matthew Kerwin) over 8 years ago

On 23 October 2015 at 07:51, wrote:

Issue #9025 has been updated by Martin Dürst.

Matthew Kerwin wrote:

duerst (Martin Dürst) wrote:

Ruby is all about making it easier for the programmer. Even the
smallest amount of debugging is too much when it can be eliminated by
tweaking the error message.

I think that statement accidentally reached a point of absurdity by
using a very precise definition of "debugging" that I don't share.

It might have been clearer for me to write "Even the smallest reduction in
the amount of debugging is worth it when it can be achieved by tweaking the
error message."

Anyway, if it doesn't make life easier for you, that's no problem. It
won't hurt you, and it will help others, even if you might not believe it.

That's true, and my position has mellowed in the past two years. At worst
harmless*, at best an improvement.

*Does anyone depend on the precise wording of this error message? I know
it's an anti-pattern, but sometimes unavoidable, especially when dealing
with these core exceptions that can't easily be modified to include
programatically-retrievable data.

Actions #11

Updated by duerst (Martin Dürst) over 8 years ago

  • Status changed from Open to Closed

Applied in changeset r52264.


vm_insnhelper.c: improved error message for "wrong number
of arguments", distinguishing given and expected argument
numbers clearly. [Feature #9025]

Actions #12

Updated by duerst (Martin Dürst) over 8 years ago

  • Related to Bug #11617: Fix tests for Feature 9025 added
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