Yes, it is a bit puzzling at first.
In Ruby, methods can receive a code block in order to perform arbitrary segments of code.
When a method expects a block, you can invoke it by calling the yield
function.
Example:
Take Person
, a class with a name
attribute and a do_with_name
method. When the method is invoked it will pass the name
attribute to the block.
class Person
def initialize( name )
@name = name
end
def do_with_name # expects a block
yield( @name ) # invoke the block and pass the `@name` attribute
end
end
Now you can invoke this method and pass an arbitrary code block.
person = Person.new("Oscar")
# Invoking the method passing a block to print the value
person.do_with_name do |value|
puts "Got: #{value}"
end
Would print:
Got: Oscar
Notice the block receives as a parameter a variable called value
. When the code invokes yield
it passes as argument the value of @name
.
yield( @name )
The same method can be invoked with a different block.
For instance to reverse the name:
reversed_name = ""
# Invoke the method passing a different block
person.do_with_name do |value|
reversed_name = value.reverse
end
puts reversed_name
=> "racsO"
Other more interesting real life examples:
Filter elements in an array:
days = ["Monday", "Tuesday", "Wednesday", "Thursday", "Friday"]
# Select those which start with 'T'
days.select do | item |
item.match /^T/
end
=> ["Tuesday", "Thursday"]
Or sort by name length:
days.sort do |x,y|
x.size <=> y.size
end
=> ["Monday", "Friday", "Tuesday", "Thursday", "Wednesday"]
If the block is optional you can use:
yield(value) if block_given?
If is not optional, just invoke it.
You can try these examples on your computer with irb
(Interactive Ruby Shell)
Here are all the examples in a copy/paste ready form:
class Person
def initialize( name )
@name = name
end
def do_with_name # expects a block
yield( @name ) # invoke the block and pass the `@name` attribute
end
end
person = Person.new("Oscar")
# Invoking the method passing a block to print the value
person.do_with_name do |value|
puts "Got: #{value}"
end
reversed_name = ""
# Invoke the method passing a different block
person.do_with_name do |value|
reversed_name = value.reverse
end
puts reversed_name
# Filter elements in an array:
days = ["Monday", "Tuesday", "Wednesday", "Thursday", "Friday"]
# Select those which start with 'T'
days.select do | item |
item.match /^T/
end
# Sort by name length:
days.sort do |x,y|
x.size <=> y.size
end