Your problem is that each time you run the method you are assigning a new value to the constant. This is not allowed, as it makes the constant non-constant; even though the contents of the string are the same (for the moment, anyhow), the actual string object itself is different each time the method is called. For example:
def foo
p "bar".object_id
end
foo #=> 15779172
foo #=> 15779112
Perhaps if you explained your use case—why you want to change the value of a constant in a method—we could help you with a better implementation.
Perhaps you'd rather have an instance variable on the class?
class MyClass
class << self
attr_accessor :my_constant
end
def my_method
self.class.my_constant = "blah"
end
end
p MyClass.my_constant #=> nil
MyClass.new.my_method
p MyClass.my_constant #=> "blah"
If you really want to change the value of a constant in a method, and your constant is a String or an Array, you can 'cheat' and use the #replace
method to cause the object to take on a new value without actually changing the object:
class MyClass
BAR = "blah"
def cheat(new_bar)
BAR.replace new_bar
end
end
p MyClass::BAR #=> "blah"
MyClass.new.cheat "whee"
p MyClass::BAR #=> "whee"
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