Constants are used to store values that should not be changed. Their names must start with an uppercase letter. By convention, most constant names are written in all uppercase letters with an underscore as word separator, such as SOME_CONSTANT.
Constants defined within classes can be accessed by all methods of that class. Those created outside a class can be accessed globally (within any method or class).
class Car
WHEELS = 4
def initialize
puts WHEELS
end
end
c = Car.new # Output: 4
Note that Ruby does not stop us from changing the value of a constant, it only issues a warning.
SOME_CONSTANT = "foo"
SOME_CONSTANT = "bar"
warning: already initialized constant SOME_CONSTANT
warning: previous definition of SOME_CONSTANT was here
In Ruby, all class and module names are constants, but convention dictates they should be written in camel case, such as SomeClass.
Constants can be accessed from outside the class, even within another class, by using the :: (double colon) operator. To access the WHEELS constant from outside the Car class, we would use Car::WHEELS. The :: operator allows constants, public instance methods and class methods to be accessed from outside the class or module on which they are defined.
A built-in method called private_constant makes constants private (accessible only within the class on which they were created). The syntax is as follows:
class Car
WHEELS = 4
private_constant:WHEELS
end
Car::WHEELS # Output: NameError: private constant Car::WHEELS referenced