Does a Binding
know the variables it stores? Or do I always have to use this in conjunction with local_variables
?
3 Answers
You get the list of local variables in a binding by doing eval("local_variables", the_binding)
.
I'm not sure whether that's what you meant by "Or do I always have to use this in conjunction with local_variables
?", but there's no way to get the list without invoking local_variables
somehow.
-
I was thinking the binding had a method which would list all the values it contained ( so that I wouldn't have to pass along the array returned by
local_variables
)– GeoJan 21, 2010 at 12:04 -
1Well, you don't have to pass it along because you can get it at any time using eval. There is no method though, unless you define one
class Binding; def variables() self.eval("local_variables") end end
– sepp2kJan 21, 2010 at 12:19 -
There is now a method
local_variables
forBinding
. See my answer. May 9, 2023 at 12:46
This is an older question, so the answer is correct for Ruby version <= 2
But since 2.1 new methods have appeared to get/set and list local variables:
local_variable_get / local_variable_set / local_variable_defined?
-
2
There is now a local_variables
method now which does exactly what @sepp2k's answer suggests.
From the documentation:
local_variables → Array
Returns the names of the binding’s local variables as symbols.
def foo
a = 1
2.times do |n|
binding.local_variables #=> [:a, :n]
end
end
This method is the short version of the following code:
binding.eval("local_variables")