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I checked out the latest Ruby version, to play a bit with the latest changes. The first thing I tried to do was call a Ruby lambda/block/proc just like you'd do with a Python callable.

a = lambda {|x| puts x}
a.call(4) # works, and prints 4
a[4] # works and prints 4
a.(4) # same
a(4) # undefined method 'a' for main:Object

Why isn't the last call possible? Will it ever be?

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Ruby is basically 100% object-oriented, but sometimes it tries to hide this fact for... convenience? Familiarity?

Basically functions defined "at the top level" are really defined as methods on a global object. To make that work, a call without a specifier is really converted to calling a method with that name on said global object. This style makes things look more script-y. Ruby is trying to do that with your last example.

The first two examples parse fine because Ruby knows you are trying to access the methods of the proc object--remember even [] is just a method you can define. The one with the explicit dot also works because the dot means "send this message to this object" (in this case, a).

I know that doesn't "solve" anything, but I hope it helps a bit.

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