Chapter 14. Callable and runnable objects

 

This chapter covers

  • Proc objects as anonymous functions
  • The lambda method for generating functions
  • Code blocks
  • The Symbol#to_proc method
  • Method objects
  • Bindings
  • The eval family of methods
  • Threads
  • Executing external programs

In addition to the basic, bread-and-butter method calls that account for most of what happens in your program, Ruby provides an extensive toolkit for making things happen in a variety of ways. You need two or more parts of your code to run in parallel? Create some Thread objects and run them as needed. Want to choose from among a set of possible functions to execute, and don’t have enough information in advance to write methods for them? Create an array of Proc objects—anonymous functions—and call the one you need. You can even isolate methods as objects, or execute dynamically created strings as code.

This chapter is about objects that you can call, execute, or run: threads, anonymous functions, strings, and even methods that have been turned into objects. We’ll look at all of these constructs along with some auxiliary tools—keywords, variable bindings, code blocks—that make Ruby’s inclusion of callable, runnable objects possible.

14.1. Basic anonymous functions: The Proc class

14.2. Creating functions with lambda and ->

14.3. Methods as objects

14.4. The eval family of methods

14.5. Parallel execution with threads

14.6. Issuing system commands from inside Ruby programs

14.7. Summary