4

I have a class under the namespace of a module, say

Module::Klass

I am able to access Klass from the console and it gives me :

Module::Klass

However, if I try to use:

"klass".constantize # Calling constantize on String

It errors out as it doesn't append the module namespace.

So, My question is : Is there a way to constantize the string according to its current context, so that I receive the klass name along with its module ?

0

2 Answers 2

16

If by "current context" you mean that you are currently within that module, you can access its constants directly.

module Foo
  class Bar
  end

  self.const_get('Bar') # => Foo::Bar
end

You can, of course, do it if you're outside of Foo.

Foo.const_get('Bar') # => Foo::Bar
7

Not with constantize:

The name is assumed to be the one of a top-level constant, no matter whether it starts with “::” or not. No lexical context is taken into account:

C = 'outside'
module M
  C = 'inside'
  C               # => 'inside'
  "C".constantize # => 'outside', same as ::C
end

But you can use const_get():

module MyModule
  class MyClass
    def self.greet
      puts 'hi'
    end
  end

  const_get("MyClass").greet  
end

--output:--
hi
2
  • 1
    You can use 'Foo::Bar'.constantize, though. Your answer is a little ambiguous on this (or maybe it's just me). Sep 2, 2013 at 18:22
  • I answered the question that was asked, and I thought that posting the quote from the constantize docs made it clear that all constants are looked up starting at the top level. However, I guess if you don't know how constants work in ruby, it is meaningless.
    – 7stud
    Sep 2, 2013 at 18:33

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