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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 11, 20262026-05-11T22:10:32+00:00 2026-05-11T22:10:32+00:00

For a while I had been including an entire class inside of a Ruby

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For a while I had been including an entire class inside of a Ruby module. Apparently this is not what I am supposed to do. It appears that the point of a module is to store functions which can then be included as methods in a new class.

I don’t want this. I have a class that I want to keep in a separate file which I can access from other files. How can I do this?

Thanks.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-11T22:10:32+00:00Added an answer on May 11, 2026 at 10:10 pm

    Modules serve a dual purpose as a holder for functions and as a namespace. Keeping classes in modules is perfectly acceptable. To put a class in a separate file, just define the class as usual and then in the file where you wish to use the class, simply put require 'name_of_file_with_class' at the top. For instance, if I defined class Foo in foo.rb, in bar.rb I would have the line require 'foo'.

    If you are using Rails, this include often happens automagically

    Edit: clarification of file layout

    #file: foo.rb
    class Foo
      def initialize
        puts "foo"
      end
    end
    

    …

    #file: bar.rb
    require 'foo'
    
    Foo.new
    

    If you are in Rails, put these classes in lib/ and use the naming convention for the files of lowercase underscored version of the class name, e.g. Foo -> foo.rb, FooBar -> foo_bar.rb, etc.

    As of ruby version 1.9 you can use require_relative, to require files relatively to the file you are editing.

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