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Jang Rush
Jang Rush

Posted on • Originally published at mmap.page on

Dive into Ruby

Features

  • ? and ! in method names.
  • 1_000_000.
  • local, Readonly, $global, @instance and @@class.
  • Structs as light weight classes.
  • class SameName merges, including core classes.
  • missing_method, define_method and other meta-programming.

Quirks

begin ... end while

begin "code executed" end while false
"code not executed" while false

This is really anti-intuitive.And the creator of Ruby said not use it.

Don’t use it please. I’m regretting this feature, and I’d like to remove it in the future if it’s possible.

Because it’s hard for users to tell begin [code] end while [cond]works differently from [code] while [cond]

loop do
...
break if [cond]
end

matz.

Proc.new

The return statement in proc created by Proc.new will not only returns control just from itself, but also from the method enclosing it.

def some_method
    myproc = Proc.new {return "End."}
    myproc.call

    # Any code below will not get executed!
    # ...
end

Well, you can argue that Proc.new inserts code into the enclosing method, just like block.But Proc.new creates an object, while block are part of an object.

And there is another difference between lambda and Proc.new.That is their handling of (wrong) arguments.lambda complains about it, while Proc.new ignores extra arguments or considers absence of arguments as nil.

irb(main):021:0> l = -> (x) { x.to_s }
=> #<Proc:0x8b63750@(irb):21 (lambda)>
irb(main):022:0> p = Proc.new { |x| x.to_s}
=> #<Proc:0x8b59494@(irb):22>
irb(main):025:0> l.call
ArgumentError: wrong number of arguments (0 for 1)
        from (irb):21:in `block in irb_binding'
        from (irb):25:in `call'
        from (irb):25
        from /usr/bin/irb:11:in `<main>'
irb(main):026:0> p.call
=> ""
irb(main):049:0> l.call 1, 2
ArgumentError: wrong number of arguments (2 for 1)
        from (irb):47:in `block in irb_binding'
        from (irb):49:in `call'
        from (irb):49
        from /usr/bin/irb:11:in `<main>'
irb(main):050:0> p.call 1, 2
=> "1"

BTW, proc in Ruby 1.8 creates a lambda, while in Ruby 1.9+ behaves like Proc.new, really confusing.

def does not create closures.

Closures are simple in Python:

def a(x):
  def b():
    return x
  b()

This won’t work in Ruby.

def a(x)
  def b
    x
  b
end

In Ruby, def starts a new scope, without access to outer variables.Only @var and $var can be accessed.And no extern keyword like in C.In Ruby, lambda creates closure:

def a(x)
  b = ->{ x }
  b.call
end

Or define_method:

def a(x)
  define_method(:b) { x }
  b
end

In Ruby 1.9, define_method is not availabel in main Object, you canuse define_singleton_method instead.

Tutorial

Ruby advertises its “Least Surprise” principle,thus I hope a basic understanding of the above features and quirksis enough to dive into Ruby.If you are unsure about something on Ruby,you can guess and try, and it usually works,except for quirks mentioned above.

If you prefer reading a tutorial before diving into Ruby,I would recommend why’s guide to Ruby,a poignant introduction to a shiny language.

REPL

Use pry.

Make

Use rake.

rake is a popular choice in Ruby.

rake is generally nice. But pathmap in rake uses rules hard to remember:

SOURCE_FILES.pathmap("%{^sources/,outputs/}X.html")

WTF is %{^sources/,outputs/}X? And what is the difference if we replace X with one of p, f, n, d, x?

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