from what I understand of the self
keyword, it simply refers to the current instance of the class. Isn't this the default behaviour at all times anyways? For example, isn't
self.var_one = method(args)
equivalent to just var_one = method(args)
?
If so then what is the use of self?
In most cases self.foo
is indeed redundant because you can just write foo
for the same effect, but in this case it is not and the self
is required.
var_one = method(args)
will create a local variable called var_one
, it will not call any method or do anything else to self
.
self.var_one = method(args)
will call the method var_one=
on self
with the argument method(args)
.
Another case where the use of self
is non-optional would be if you want to pass it as an argument to a method, i.e. some_method(self)
- you can't do that without the self
keyword.
There are several important uses, most of which are basically to disambiguate between instance methods, class methods, and variables.
First, this is the best way to define class methods. IE:
class Foo
def self.bar
"class method bar"
end
def bar
"instance method bar"
end
end
Foo.bar #returns "class method bar"
foo = Foo.new
foo.bar #returns "instance method bar"
Also, within instance methods self refers to the instance, within class methods it refers to the class, and it can always be used to distinguish from local variables.
class Bar
def self.foo
"foo!"
end
def baz
"baz!"
end
def self.success
foo #looks for variable foo, doesn't find one, looks for class method foo, finds it, returns "foo!"
end
def self.fail
baz #looks for variable baz, doesn't find one, looks for class method baz, doesn't find one, raises exception
end
def instance_success
baz #looks for variable baz, doesn't find one, looks for instance method baz, finds it, returns "baz!"
end
def instance_fail
foo #looks for variable foo, doesn't find one, looks for instance method foo, doesn't find one, raises exception
end
def local_variable
baz = "is my favorite method"
baz #looks for variable baz, finds it, returns "is my favorite method"
end
def disambiguate
baz = " is my favorite method"
self.baz + baz #looks for instance method baz, finds it, looks for local variable baz, finds it, returns "baz! is my favorite method"
end
end
So, in the end, you can avoid using self
in many cases, but it's often helpful to go ahead and use it to make sure that you don't inadvertently create naming conflicts later on. Sometimes those can create bugs that are very hard to find. In the end it's often a matter of personal style.
Update: As noted in the comments, one more really important thing:
In a class, if you have a method like this:
def bar=(string)
...
end
And in another method you call:
def other_method
bar = "abcd"
end
It isn't going to call your bar= method, it's going to create a local variable bar. So, in this case you use self to tell ruby not to create a local variable, like so:
def other_method
self.bar = "abcd"
end
The same thing applies if you want to take an argument with the name of a method, like so:
def example
...
end
def other_thing(example)
self.example(example)
end
If you left off self it would assume you meant the local variable with the same name.
So, in general, self in method names is used to distinguish between class and instance variables, and everywhere else you use it when Ruby needs help distinguishing between method calls and local variables or local variable assignment.
I hope that makes sense!
here's an example use:
def run miles
self.miles = miles
end
In this case self will help. in most cases self is redundant.
One other use of self
is to declare class methods (similar to static methods in Java).
class foo
def self.bar
#do class related stuff here
end
end
That being said, you could also have used def foo.bar
instead for the method signature.
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/6669527/use-of-ruby-self-keyword