(1...4) is a Range. Ranges in ruby are not like arrays; one if their advantages is you can create a range like
(1..1e9)
without taking up all of your machine's memory. Also, you can create this range:
r = (1.0...4.0)
Which means "the set of all floating point numbers from 1.0 to 4.0, including 1.0 but not 4.0"
In other words:
irb(main):013:0> r.include? 3.9999
=> true
irb(main):014:0> r.include? 3.99999999999
=> true
irb(main):015:0> r.include? 4.0
=> false
you can turn an integer Range into an array:
irb(main):022:0> (1..4).to_a
=> [1, 2, 3, 4]
but not a floating point range:
irb(main):023:0> (1.0...4.0).to_a
TypeError: can't iterate from Float
from (irb):23:in `each'
from (irb):23:in `to_a'
from (irb):23
from /home/mslade/rubygems1.9/bin/irb:12:in `<main>'
Because there is no natural way to iterate over floating point numbers. Instead you use #step:
irb(main):015:0> (1..4).step(0.5).to_a
=> [1.0, 1.5, 2.0, 2.5, 3.0, 3.5, 4.0]
irb(main):016:0> (1...4).step(0.5).to_a
=> [1.0, 1.5, 2.0, 2.5, 3.0, 3.5]
If you need to iterate backwards through a large integer range, use Integer#downto.