475

I'll use python as an example of what I'm looking for (you can think of it as pseudocode if you don't know Python):

>>> a = 1
>>> type(a)
<type 'int'>

I know in ruby I can do :

1.9.3p194 :002 > 1.class
 => Fixnum 

But is this the proper way to determine the type of the object?

13
  • 5
    @JörgWMittag Yet AFAICR that's what ` type` does in Python, although my memory is fuzzy. You'd need isinstance or check for responds. But simply saying "NOES!!!" isn't really helpful, now, is it? Instead consider being educational. Apr 3, 2013 at 12:43
  • 4
    @JörgWMittag While I'm sympathetic, OP provided code to mimic in Ruby. Unless you actually educate the OP saying noes isn't helpful, IMO. And even if you did, it would likely be informational only, since OP defined what s/he wanted thru code. Apr 3, 2013 at 13:12
  • 6
    @JörgWMittag - in Ruby everything is an Object, so there's no primitive types as there are in Python (int, long, boolean etc.) As a result within Ruby, classes are type definitions. This is not limited to Ruby either, the word class and type are synonymous in several other languages, and more broadly in OOP theory.
    – ocodo
    Jan 3, 2014 at 3:26
  • 6
    Since we're really talking about Ruby here, Types and Classes are synonymous, there's no debate about this, all values are Objects. So for anyone simply talking about Ruby, Classes are Types. - ref: ruby-lang.org/en/about
    – ocodo
    Jan 3, 2014 at 4:53
  • 2
    @JörgWMittag That essay is quite informative so far, and I'll read the rest of it when I get a chance. In particular, Cook seems to articulate quite well (and with much more background knowledge than I have) why it's incorrect to claim (as one of my professors did) that Python, Ruby, and other dynamically-typed languages "aren't really object-oriented" (what he probably meant, without realizing it, was that they weren't ADT-oriented). But Ruby isn't statically typed, so it doesn't have ADTs in the sense Cook is describing, so your objections on the basis of that distinction aren't helpful. Mar 25, 2014 at 22:43

6 Answers 6

755

The proper way to determine the "type" of an object, which is a wobbly term in the Ruby world, is to call object.class.

Since classes can inherit from other classes, if you want to determine if an object is "of a particular type" you might call object.is_a?(ClassName) to see if object is of type ClassName or derived from it.

Normally type checking is not done in Ruby, but instead objects are assessed based on their ability to respond to particular methods, commonly called "Duck typing". In other words, if it responds to the methods you want, there's no reason to be particular about the type.

For example, object.is_a?(String) is too rigid since another class might implement methods that convert it into a string, or make it behave identically to how String behaves. object.respond_to?(:to_s) would be a better way to test that the object in question does what you want.

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    -1. #class does not return the type of the object, it returns its class. The name should be a dead giveaway. Class and Type are two completely different concepts in OO. Apr 2, 2013 at 22:57
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    @Jörg W Mittag: I disagree. "Class" and "processor speed" (to pick an example) are two completely different concepts, but "class" and "type" are closely related concepts. For instance, here's what the Wikipedia article on Class says: "In object-oriented programming, a class is a construct that is used to define a distinct type." tadman was being helpful to the questioner. Aug 27, 2013 at 13:26
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    @JörgWMittag In Ruby the closest thing to typeof from C, JavaScript and others is class. There's no formal protocol system in Ruby like there is in other languages, Objective-C being the closest Smalltalk relative with that. If you're defining "type" as "object which responds to a particular set of methods with acceptable results" then there's really no way to assert that. It's just too loose. Most of the time in Ruby when referring to an object's type, it's understood you're talking about the class. I did use the term type in quotation marks for that very reason.
    – tadman
    Aug 27, 2013 at 14:36
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    @Jörg W Mittag: I continue to assert that "class" and "type" are certainly not completely different concepts in OO, as demonstrated by the quote. (Also: how do you declare a variable in Java? By giving either the type or the class of the variable, followed by its name: "int i" or "Integer j".) tadman answered the question in a way that seemed to satisfy both the questioner and the general audience, while clarifying the terminology Ruby uses. I have no interest in getting into academic hair-splitting over the finer points of object-oriented terminology, so please have the last word. Aug 27, 2013 at 14:56
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    @TeemuLeisti Most of the trouble here comes from the fact that everything in Ruby is an object, and so has a class, whereas in virtually every other language there's primitive types which are not objects and have no class, in contrast to objects which do. When there's no such thing as a pure type, and no way to formally define one, the meaning becomes especially hazy in the Ruby world. Matz is not strictly adhering to any particular school of thought here other than his own.
    – tadman
    Aug 27, 2013 at 15:21
108

you could also try: instance_of?

p 1.instance_of? Fixnum    #=> True
p "1".instance_of? String  #=> True
p [1,2].instance_of? Array #=> True
0
53

Oftentimes in Ruby, you don't actually care what the object's class is, per se, you just care that it responds to a certain method. This is known as Duck Typing and you'll see it in all sorts of Ruby codebases.

So in many (if not most) cases, its best to use Duck Typing using #respond_to?(method):

object.respond_to?(:to_i)
2
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    valid point. doesn't answer the question but hits the spirit of the question.
    – user566245
    Sep 23, 2015 at 19:31
  • 2
    @user566245 well it responds_to?(:the_question), but like you said it doesn't answer the question, just gives related information. Pretty sure answers need to answer the question.
    – R. Rincón
    Jun 13, 2020 at 17:45
36

I would say "yes". Matz had said something like this in one of his talks, "Ruby objects have no types." Not all of it but the part that he is trying to get across to us. Why would anyone have said "Everything is an Object" then? To add he said "Data has Types not objects".

RubyConf 2016 - Opening Keynote by Yukihiro 'Matz' Matsumoto

But Ruby doesn't care as much about the type of object as the class. We use classes, not types. All data, then, has a class.

12345.class

'my string'.class

Classes may also have ancestors

Object.ancestors

They also have meta classes but I'll save you the details on that.

Once you know the class then you'll be able to lookup what methods you may use for it. That's where the "data type" is needed. If you really want to get into details the look up...

"The Ruby Object Model"

This is the term used for how Ruby handles objects. It's all internal so you don't really see much of this but it's nice to know. But that's another topic.

Yes! The class is the data type. Objects have classes and data has types. So if you know about data bases then you know there are only a finite set of types.

text blocks numbers

1
  • For instance, Object.ancestors # => [Object, Kernel, BasicObject]
    – Dorian
    May 23, 2017 at 21:05
4

variable_name.class

Here variable name is "a" a.class

3

every variable have a prop with name class. if you print it, it will tell you what type it is. so do like this:

puts a.class

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