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Polished Ruby Programming

You're reading from   Polished Ruby Programming Build better software with more intuitive, maintainable, scalable, and high-performance Ruby code

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781801072724
Length 434 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Jeremy Evans Jeremy Evans
Author Profile Icon Jeremy Evans
Jeremy Evans
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Toc

Table of Contents (23) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Fundamental Ruby Programming Principles
2. Chapter 1: Getting the Most out of Core Classes FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Designing Useful Custom Classes 4. Chapter 3: Proper Variable Usage 5. Chapter 4: Methods and Their Arguments 6. Chapter 5: Handling Errors 7. Chapter 6: Formatting Code for Easy Reading 8. Section 2: Ruby Library Programming Principles
9. Chapter 7: Designing Your Library 10. Chapter 8: Designing for Extensibility 11. Chapter 9: Metaprogramming and When to Use It 12. Chapter 10: Designing Useful Domain-Specific Languages 13. Chapter 11: Testing to Ensure Your Code Works 14. Chapter 12: Handling Change 15. Chapter 13: Using Common Design Patterns 16. Chapter 14: Optimizing Your Library 17. Section 3: Ruby Web Programming Principles
18. Chapter 15: The Database Is Key 19. Chapter 16: Web Application Design Principles 20. Chapter 17: Robust Web Application Security 21. Assessments 22. Other Books You May Enjoy

Understanding that there are no class methods, only instance methods

Ruby programmers often refer to methods you can call on classes as class methods, and methods that you can call on modules as module methods. However, Ruby does not have class methods or module methods as separate concepts – it only has instance methods. Every method that you would think of as a class or a module method is just an instance method of the class or module's singleton class. That doesn't mean that you should stop using the terms class method or module method – it just means you should understand that these methods are not special and are just like all other methods.

You will often see class methods defined on classes in one of four ways. The most common way is to use self in front of the method, as shown here:

class Foo
  def self.bar
    :baz
  end
end

This makes it obvious that the method being defined is a singleton method, because...

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