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Home/ Questions/Q 42557
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Asked: May 10, 20262026-05-10T15:21:24+00:00 2026-05-10T15:21:24+00:00

I often plug pre-configured lambdas into enumerable methods like ‘map’, ‘select’ etc. but the

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I often plug pre-configured lambdas into enumerable methods like ‘map’, ‘select’ etc. but the behavior of ‘inject’ seems to be different. e.g. with

mult4 = lambda {|item| item * 4 } 

then

(5..10).map &mult4 

gives me

[20, 24, 28, 32, 36, 40] 

However, if I make a 2-parameter lambda for use with an inject like so,

multL = lambda {|product, n| product * n } 

I want to be able to say

(5..10).inject(2) &multL 

since ‘inject’ has an optional single parameter for the initial value, but that gives me …

irb(main):027:0> (5..10).inject(2) &multL LocalJumpError: no block given         from (irb):27:in `inject'         from (irb):27 

However, if I stuff the ‘&multL’ into a second parameter to inject, then it works.

irb(main):028:0> (5..10).inject(2, &multL) => 302400 

My question is ‘why does that work and not the previous attempt?’

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  1. 2026-05-10T15:21:25+00:00Added an answer on May 10, 2026 at 3:21 pm

    So the reason that

    (5..10).map &mult4 

    works and

    (5..10).inject(2) &multL 

    doesn’t is that ruby parens are implicit in the first case, so it really means

    (5..10).map(&mult4) 

    if you wanted, for the second case you could use

    (5..10).inject 2, &multL 

    The outside the parens trick only works for passing blocks to a method, not lambda objects.

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