views:

39

answers:

1

class C
end

var = "I am a local var outside"

C.class_eval do
   def self.a_class_method
     puts var 
   end
   # I know, this is not correct, because the 'def' created a new scope;
   # I am asking a solution to make it;
   # I also know that use 'define_method' can create a instance method without creating a new scope.
   # but my point is how to define a **class method**
end

+1  A: 

Class methods don't really exist in Ruby, they are just singleton methods of the class object. Singleton methods don't really exist, either, they are just ordinary instance methods of the object's singleton class.

Since you already know how to define instance methods (using Module#define_method), you already know everything you need to know. You just need to call class_eval on C's singleton class instead of C itself:

(class << C; self end).class_eval do
  define_method(:a_class_method) do
    puts var 
  end
end

Current versions of Ruby have a singleton_class method to make that easier:

C.singleton_class.class_eval do
  define_method(:a_class_method) do
    puts var 
  end
end

But actually, current versions of Ruby also have Module#define_singleton_method, so, in this particular case, that is unnecessary:

C.define_singleton_method(:a_class_method) do
  puts var 
end
Jörg W Mittag
Thank U very much!
Croplio