I'll give my opinion, and maybe I'll get a kicking for it, but I don't bother with protected or private in Ruby. The reality is, Ruby treats you like an adult, if you want to run a private method from outside the class, you can (there are ways). You can run protected methods outside the class. You can even reassign constants... you can do whatever you like, basically.
And that's why I like it, it's your responsibility. My feeling is, that to mark something as protected or private you are doing two things:
- Indicating that you don't think a consumer will need it.
- Second guessing what someone else needs.
and in addition, you're making it harder to test, as it can be a real pain testing private methods (see What's the best way to unit test protected & private methods in Ruby? for ways around it)
For those last two reasons, I don't bother with them. If you really wanted some kind of barrier between your classes/methods and the consumers (be they code or developers) then there are other, more effective ways (proxies, obfuscation, encryption, password protected methods etc). Otherwise, why not give them access to the same tools you used?