I'm trying to wrap my head around Ruby variables and thought it might be good to see them in terms of C#
could someone tell me the C# equivalent of Ruby's (for example is @@ == public static variable?):
$ global variable
@ instance variable
@@ class variable
[a-z] local variable
[A-Z] constant
any other types of variables I'm missing?
Could someone also explain how @instance variables are used/function?
at first I thought it was some global variable in the instance of a class, but then i saw it used with a scope like a local variable in the instance's method.
here's is an example from the 'well grounded rubyist'
class C
def show_var
@v = "i am an instance variable initialized to a string"
puts @v
end
@v = "instance variables can appear anywhere..."
end
C.new.show_var
if I wanted 'v' to be the same variable from anywhere in the class instance, what is the Ruby mechanism for doing this?
@v
points to a "class variable". (Which is more or less a static field, except not really, and it's not even what Ruby calls "class variables", because class variables and instance variables of a class are different things.) Whatever "Well Grounded Rubyist" is, it's doing you a disservice by showing you the above example without explaining the distinction. Or that it's amazingly bad practice to use the same name for a class variable and for instance variables of the same class.