81

Can anyone explain to me what the meaning of adding self to the method definition is? Is it similar to the this keyword in java?

3 Answers 3

110

Contrary to other languages, Ruby has no class methods, but it has singleton methods attached to a particular object.

cat = String.new("cat")
def cat.speak
    'miaow'
end
cat.speak #=> "miaow" 
cat.singleton_methods #=> ["speak"] 

def cat.speak creates a singleton method attached to the object cat.

When you write class A, it is equivalent to A = Class.new :

A = Class.new
def A.speak
    "I'm class A"
end
A.speak #=> "I'm class A" 
A.singleton_methods #=> ["speak"] 

def A.speak creates a singleton method attached to the object A. We call it a class method of class A.

When you write

class A
    def self.c_method
        'in A#c_method'
    end
end

you create an instance of Class(*). Inside the class definition, Ruby sets self to this new instance of Class, which has been assigned to the constant A. Thus def self.c_method is equivalent to def cat.speak, that is to say you define a singleton method attached to the object self, which is currently the class A.

Now the class A has two singleton methods, that we commonly call class methods.

A.singleton_methods
 => ["c_method", "speak"] 

(*) technically, in this case where A has already been created by A = Class.new, class A reopens the existing class. That's why we have two singleton methods at the end. But in the usual case where it is the first definition of a class, it means Class.new.

3
  • 13
    This is the correct answer. It is true that experienced Rubyists sometimes use the term "class method" to mean "instance method of the class object's singleton class", but they only use that shorthand in the full understanding that there is no such thing as a class method in Ruby. (In fact, there is no such thing as a "singleton method" either: singleton methods are just regular methods which happen to be defined in the singleton class of an object.) The OP, however, is obviously not an experienced Rubyist, therefore confusing him with shorthand is not a good idea. Thumbs up! Dec 5, 2012 at 13:37
  • Does this meaning change when referring to a module rather than a class?
    – Adrian
    May 28, 2021 at 5:09
  • @Adrian - functionally it works the same. For example, if you have def self.bar inside module Foo, then you could call Foo.bar. However, there is a difference in that modules are technically instances of the class Module which is an instance of the class Class (ie the class of all classes). This is different than, for example A in Bernards answer above, which is "a class", which is simply an instance of Class. Hope this helps! Aug 20, 2021 at 16:18
68

In ruby self is somewhat similar to this in java, but when it comes to classes its more like the keyword static in java. A short example:

class A 
  # class method 
  def self.c_method
    true
  end
  # instance method
  def i_method
    true
  end
end

A.c_method #=> true
A.i_method #=> failure
A.new.i_method #=> true
A.new.c_method #=> failure

Update: Difference between static methods in java and class methods in ruby

Static methods in Java have two distinct features that makes them different from instance methods: a) they are static, b) they are not associated with an instance. (IOW: they really aren't like methods at all, they are just procedures.) In Ruby, all methods are dynamic, and all methods are associated with an instance. In fact, unlike Java where there are three different kinds of "methods" (instance methods, static methods and constructors), there is only one kind of method in Ruby: instance methods. So, no: static methods in Java are completely unlike methods in Ruby. – Jörg W Mittag 1 hour ago

3
  • It is nothing at all like static. In particular, those methods are dynamic, not static. Dec 4, 2012 at 17:33
  • 1
    if you define a Class#method in ruby with def self.method ... its kinda like class JavaClass; public static void method ... in java
    – krichard
    Dec 4, 2012 at 17:57
  • 3
    Static methods in Java have two distinct features that makes them different from instance methods: a) they are static, b) they are not associated with an instance. (IOW: they really aren't like methods at all, they are just procedures.) In Ruby, all methods are dynamic, and all methods are associated with an instance. In fact, unlike Java where there are three different kinds of "methods" (instance methods, static methods and constructors), there is only one kind of method in Ruby: instance methods. So, no: static methods in Java are completely unlike methods in Ruby. Dec 5, 2012 at 13:33
14

When declaring a method, the self of the declaration is the declaring class/module, so effectively you are defining a class method. For the client, this works similar to a static method in java. The client would call the method on the class instead of an instance: MyClass.method

Here you can find some more details on class and instance methods.

EDIT: While the self keyword is akin to the this keyword in java, the effects of using self for class method declaration are similar to the effect of using the static keyword in java. The similarity is that static methods in java, like class methods in ruby are accessed using the class object iself instead of an instance of the class.

Please note that static does not stand for the opposite of dynamic. The choice of the name for this keyword is questionable (probably inherited from C) and rather should have been called perClass or similar to better reflect the meaning. The technical meaning is that all static members exist only once for each classloader.

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    It is nothing at all like static. In particular, those methods are dynamic, not static. Dec 4, 2012 at 17:32
  • 6
    @JörgWMittag: it is like Java's static in at least one sense -- it applies to the class level rather than the instance level. Dec 4, 2012 at 17:48
  • 7
    @JörgWMittag - <nothing at all> is a rather strong term for something with distinct similarities (and surely there are differences). have added some info to clarify my viewpoint.
    – kostja
    Dec 5, 2012 at 10:06
  • 1
    @kostja I think in this context, static in Java refers to static binding (i.e. which method to call is determined at compile time), as opposed to dynamic binding which is used for instance methods. So in this sense, it does stand for the opposite of dynamic, but is true the keyword static has an unpractical amount of overloaded meanings, esp. in C. May 20, 2019 at 9:29
  • 1
    yeah, my first error was to say 'is like static in Java'. I was concerned only with the method binding. Then the discussion got out of hand :) have changed the initial wording now.
    – kostja
    May 20, 2019 at 9:37

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