Class Symbol
In: object.c
Parent: Object

Symbol objects represent names and some strings inside the Ruby interpreter. They are generated using the :name and :"string" literals syntax, and by the various to_sym methods. The same Symbol object will be created for a given name or string for the duration of a program’s execution, regardless of the context or meaning of that name. Thus if Fred is a constant in one context, a method in another, and a class in a third, the Symbol :Fred will be the same object in all three contexts.

   module One
     class Fred
     end
     $f1 = :Fred
   end
   module Two
     Fred = 1
     $f2 = :Fred
   end
   def Fred()
   end
   $f3 = :Fred
   $f1.id   #=> 2514190
   $f2.id   #=> 2514190
   $f3.id   #=> 2514190

Methods

===   all_symbols   id2name   inspect   to_i   to_int   to_s   to_sym  

Public Class methods

Returns an array of all the symbols currently in Ruby’s symbol table.

   Symbol.all_symbols.size    #=> 903
   Symbol.all_symbols[1,20]   #=> [:floor, :ARGV, :Binding, :symlink,
                                   :chown, :EOFError, :$;, :String,
                                   :LOCK_SH, :"setuid?", :$<,
                                   :default_proc, :compact, :extend,
                                   :Tms, :getwd, :$=, :ThreadGroup,
                                   :wait2, :$>]

Public Instance methods

Equality—At the Object level, == returns true only if obj and other are the same object. Typically, this method is overridden in descendent classes to provide class-specific meaning.

Unlike ==, the equal? method should never be overridden by subclasses: it is used to determine object identity (that is, a.equal?(b) iff a is the same object as b).

The eql? method returns true if obj and anObject have the same value. Used by Hash to test members for equality. For objects of class Object, eql? is synonymous with ==. Subclasses normally continue this tradition, but there are exceptions. Numeric types, for example, perform type conversion across ==, but not across eql?, so:

   1 == 1.0     #=> true
   1.eql? 1.0   #=> false

Returns the name or string corresponding to sym.

   :fred.id2name   #=> "fred"

Returns the representation of sym as a symbol literal.

   :fred.inspect   #=> ":fred"

Returns an integer that is unique for each symbol within a particular execution of a program.

   :fred.to_i           #=> 9809
   "fred".to_sym.to_i   #=> 9809

:nodoc:

Returns the name or string corresponding to sym.

   :fred.id2name   #=> "fred"

In general, to_sym returns the Symbol corresponding to an object. As sym is already a symbol, self is returned in this case.

To view or add comments on this documentation, please go to the API wiki.

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