UPDATE: Since this answer seems to have gotten some interest lately, I wanted to point out that there is discussion on the Ruby issue tracker to remove the feature discussed here, namely to forbid having method definitions inside a method body.
No, Ruby doesn't have nested methods.
You can do something like this:
class Test1
def meth1
def meth2
puts "Yay"
end
meth2
end
end
Test1.new.meth1
But that is not a nested method. I repeat: Ruby does not have nested methods.
What this is, is a dynamic method definition. When you run meth1
, the body of meth1
will be executed. The body just happens to define a method named meth2
, which is why after running meth1
once, you can call meth2
.
But where is meth2
defined? Well, it's obviously not defined as a nested method, since there are no nested methods in Ruby. It's defined as an instance method of Test1
:
Test1.new.meth2
# Yay
Also, it will obviously be redefined every time you run meth1
:
Test1.new.meth1
# Yay
Test1.new.meth1
# test1.rb:3: warning: method redefined; discarding old meth2
# test1.rb:3: warning: previous definition of meth2 was here
# Yay
In short: no, Ruby does not support nested methods.
Note also that in Ruby, method bodies cannot be closures, only block bodies can. This pretty much eliminates the major use case for nested methods, since even if Ruby supported nested methods, you couldn't use the outer method's variables in the nested method.
UPDATE CONTINUED: at a later stage, then, this syntax might be re-used for adding nested methods to Ruby, which would behave the way I described: they would be scoped to their containing method, i.e. invisible and inaccessible outside of their containing method body. And possibly, they would have access to their containing method's lexical scope. However, if you read the discussion I linked above, you can observe that matz is heavily against nested methods (but still for removing nested method definitions).