4

Ruby's stdlib Forwardable and SingleForwardable are almost the same, please see this gist to compare their code.

From the SingleForwardable's documentation it says:

SingleForwardable can be used to setup delegation at the object level as well. Also, SingleForwardable can be used to set up delegation for a Class or Module.

But I see Forwardable could also do the job.

What is their main difference and most importantly, what are their use cases? Thanks.

1 Answer 1

3

For me, it seems almost identical. The only actual difference I see is the

  module_eval(str, __FILE__, line_no)

added in Forwardable.

I guess that SingleForwardable was an old version and that Forwardable is the new name for it. Forwardable looks like extended version of the former.

It also seems that SingleForwardable was retrofitted with support for debug flag, but note that it's bound back to Forwardable class. I guess the SingleForwardable was left behind and patched just to not break any old code that already was using that class.

But still, that's a guess.

0

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.