Very basic question here - We are asked to translate the following to the new format, so
"hello".send(:reverse)
becomes
"hello".reverse
What does the :/
mean in the following?
10.send(:/, 3)
=> 3
That is a method like Fixnum#/
. Object#send
method takes it first argument as method name, which can be either a symbol or string.
So you are doing division operation by using 10.send(:/, 3)
, which is nothing but 10/3
(which is a syntactic sugar of 10./(3)
).
10.send(:divmod, 3)
is equivalent to 10.divmod(3)
in the same way 10.send(:/, 3)
is equivalent to 10./(3)
, which is equivalent to 10 / 3
.
May 5, 2014 at 15:38
:
-anything thing means "symbol". In this case, it's read as "symbol-slash". The syntax allows for a wide variety of these, like:+
and:?
but in general terms:x
is equivalent to"x".to_sym
for a large variety ofx
type terms.:-)
:-D
:'-(
:-o
:-<
:-s
:->
:~-(
:-0
:-e
):-(