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I've been coding in Ruby for sometime now, but I don't understand when to use:

def self.METHOD_NAME
end

or just:

def METHOD_NAME
end

In any Rails model. Is "self" a modifier like private in Java? When should I use it and when not?. Thanks a ton.

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"self" in this context corresponds to "static" in Java. In this case, self is referring to the CLASS (as opposed to the Object). Ruby Classes can also have private and protected declarations. Ruby also uses self as the "this" reference within the OBJECT INSTANCE as well. – Toby Hede Dec 25 '08 at 0:00

6 Answers

vote up 20 vote down check
def self.method_name
end

defines a class method

def method_name
end

defines an instance method

This: http://www.rubyfleebie.com/understanding-class-methods-in-ruby/ is a pretty good post on it

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vote up 9 vote down

A quick explanation of what that means:

In ruby, you can define methods on a particular object:

a = "hello"

def a.informal
  "hi"
end

a.informal
=> "hi"

What happens when you do that is that the object a, wich is of class String, gets it's class changed to a "ghost" class, aka metaclass, singleton class or eigenclass. That new class superclass is String.

Also, inside class definitions, self is set to the class being defined, so

class Greeting
  def self.say_hello
    "Hello"
  end
  #is the same as:
  def Greeting.informal
    "hi"
  end
end

What happens there is that the object Greeting, which is of class class, gets a new metaclass with the new methods, so when you call

Greeting.informal
=> "hi"

There's no such thing as class methods in ruby, but the semantics are similar.

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vote up 2 vote down

In this context - def self.method_name makes it sort of equivalent to the Java static method:

ruby:

class HexHelper
  def self.to_h(num)
    sprintf("%x", num)
  end
end

use: HexHelper.to_h(12345)

java:

public class HexHelper
{
  public static String toHex(int num)
  {
    return new PrintfFormat("%x").sprintf(num);
  }
}

use: HexHelper.toHex(12345)
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vote up 0 vote down

self is like the this keyword in Java. It's a reference to the current object instance. If your model code performs an operation on the current object, then you'd probably need a function without self.method_name specifier.

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vote up 0 vote down

self is always the current object

When you see self here

def self.method_name end

You are not in an instance method, so self is the current Class object.

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vote up 0 vote down

A good guide on when to use which one:

  • If the method depends on any internal state of the object, or must know which instance of the object it is addressing, then DO NOT make it a class (self.) method.
  • If the method does not depend on the state of the object, or on having a specific instance of the object, then in may be made a class method.

When making a class method, think carefully about which class or module it belongs in. If you ever catch yourself duplicating code in class methods across classes, factor it into a module that other classes may mix in.

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