In a lot of programming languages, including Ruby, variables are scoped, and in your code val1
is in the local scope. It is forgotten when the scope – in this case the function – ends. You probably wanted an instance variable.
A local variable has a name starting with a lower case letter or an underscore character (_).
Each object represents its own song, so we need each of our Song objects to carry around its own song name, artist, and duration. This means we need to store these values as instance variables within the object. In Ruby, an instance variable is simply a name preceded by an at
sign (@
).
One you have an instance variable, you can access it.
class Person
def name
@name # simply returning an instance variable @name
end
end
person = Person.new
person.name # => nil
But you won't be able to set a value:
person.name = "miku" # => no method error
So for read and write access you'll need provide writer methods or use attr_accessor
. This answer explains it in examples: What is attr_accessor in Ruby?
Refs: