How is it that Ruby allows a class access methods outside of the class implicitly?
Example:
class Candy
def land
homer
end
end
def homer
puts "Hello"
end
Candy.new.land #Outputs Hello
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The definition of the "homer" method is adding the method to the Object class. It is not defining a free function. Class Candy implicitly inherits from Object, and so has access to the methods in Object. When you call "homer" in the "land" method, the method resolution can't find a definition in the current class, goes to the super class, finds the method you have added to Object, and calls it. |
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Technically, the definition of the |
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A simple way to find out what happens
Candy has Object in its lookup chain which in turn has a private instance method "homer" so method resolution succeeds The def statement always defines the method in the class of whatever self is at the point of definition
Which is why homer ends up on Object |
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