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I was learning ruby recently from koans and i noticed one thing about symbols and string objects. When i assigned two different variables same symbols, i found that the object_id's were same.

2.1.1 :017 > symbol1 = :a
 => :a 
2.1.1 :018 > symbol2 = :a
 => :a 
2.1.1 :019 > symbol1.object_id
 => 361768 
2.1.1 :020 > symbol2.object_id
 => 361768 

Now seeing this i thought that it should be true strings and integers too. But when i did same with strings the object id's ended up being different.

2.1.1 :021 > string1 = "test"
 => "test" 
2.1.1 :022 > string2 = "test"
 => "test" 
2.1.1 :023 > string1.object_id
 => 13977640 
2.1.1 :024 > string2.object_id
 => 13932280 

Why is the behavior of symbols and strings different?

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1 Answer 1

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You can think of symbols as self-referential interned strings - that is, only one copy of a given symbol will ever exist. This is also true of some objects like Fixnum instances, booleans, or nil, as well. They are not garbage collected, are not duplicable, and are not mutable.

Strings, on the other hand, are garbage collected, are duplicable, and are mutable. Every time you declare a string, a new object is allocated.

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