class Example
private
def example_test
puts 'Hello'
end
end
e = Example.new
e.example_test
This of course will not work, because we specified explicit receiver - instance of Example (e
), and that is against a "private rule".
But I cannot understand, why one cannot do in Ruby this:
class Foo
def public_m
self.private_m # <=
end
private
def private_m
puts 'Hello'
end
end
Foo.new.public_m
The current object inside public_m
method definition (i.e. self
) is the instance of Foo. So why it is not allowed? To fix that I have to change self.private_m
to just private_m
. But why this differ, isn't the self
an instance of Foo inside public_m
? And who is the receiver of bare-word private_m
call? Isn't that self
- what actually you omit because, Ruby will do it for you (will call private_m on self)?
I hope I didn't confuse it too much, I am still fresh to Ruby.
EDIT:
Thank you for all the answers. Putting them all together I was able (finally) to grok the obvious (and not so obvious for someone, who have never seen things like Ruby): that self
itself can be
explicit and implicit receiver and that make the difference. So there are two rules, if you want to call a private method: self
must be implicit receiver, and that self must be an instance of current class (Example
in that case - and that takes place only when self if inside instance method definition, during this method execution). Please correct me if I am wrong.
class Example
# self as an explicit receiver (will throw an error)
def explicit
self.some_private_method
end
# self as an implicit receiver (will be ok)
def implicit
some_private_method
end
private
def some_private_method; end
end
Example.new.implicit
Message for anyone who could find this question during the google trails: this may be helpful - http://weblog.jamisbuck.org/2007/2/23/method-visibility-in-ruby
See Question&Answers more detail:
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