That other post makes it seem confusing, but it really isn't. If you are interested in such things, you should read "Metaprogramming Ruby". Until then, the basic rule is one step to the right and up
:
Object (superclass)
^
|
Parent class A(superclass)
^
|
Parent class B(superclass)
^
|
obj -> object's class
2) Singleton classes are inserted between the obj and the object's class:
Object
^
|
Parent class A(superclass)
^
|
Parent class B(superclass)
^
|
object's class(superclass)
^
|
obj -> obj's singleton_class
3) Included modules are inserted immediately above the class that does the including:
Object
^
|
Parent class A
^
|
Module included by Parent Class B
^
|
Parent class B
^
|
object's class
^
|
obj -> obj's singleton_class
Edit:
Please point out any flaws
p method_lookup_chain(Class)
--output:--
[#<Class:Class>, #<Class:Module>, #<Class:Object>, #<Class:BasicObject>]
But...
class Object
def greet
puts "Hi from an Object instance method"
end
end
Class.greet
--output:--
Hi from an Object instance method
And..
class Class
def greet
puts "Hi from a Class instance method"
end
end
Class.greet
--output:--
Hi from a Class instance method
The lookup path for a method called on a class actually continues past BasicObject's singleton class(#<Class:BasicObject>
):
class BasicObject
class <<self
puts superclass
end
end
--output:--
Class
The full lookup path for a method called on Class looks like this:
Basic Object
^
|
Object
^
|
Module
^
|
Class
^
|
BasicObject BasicObject's singleton class
| ^
| |
Object Object's singleton class
| ^
| |
Module Module's singleton class
| ^
| |
Class ---> Class's singleton class
The lookup starts in Class's singleton class and then goes up the hierarchy on the right. "Metaprogramming Ruby" claims there is a unified lookup theory for all objects, but the lookup for methods called on a class does not fit the diagram in 3).
You have the same problem here:
class A
end
class B < A
end
p method_lookup_chain(B)
--output:--
[#<Class:B>, #<Class:A>, #<Class:Object>, #<Class:BasicObject>]
It should be this:
Basic Object
^
|
Object
^
|
Module
^
|
Class
^
|
BasicObject BasicObject's singleton class
| ^
| |
Object Object's singleton class
| ^
| |
A A's singleton class
| ^
| |
B.greet --> B's singleton class
One thing you need to keep in mind: the lookup path of any method called on a class has to include Class somewhere because ALL classes inherit from Class.