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Home/ Questions/Q 650629
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T22:04:27+00:00 2026-05-13T22:04:27+00:00

I was trying to get Matz and Flanagan’s Ruby Programming Language metaprogramming chapter into

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I was trying to get Matz and Flanagan’s “Ruby Programming Language” metaprogramming chapter into my head, However I couldn’t understand the output from the following code snippet that I dreamed up:

p Module.constants.length           # => 88
$snapshot1 = Module.constants       
class A
  NAME=:abc

  $snapshot2 = Module.constants
  p $snapshot2.length               # => 90
  p $snapshot2 - $snapshot1         # => ["A", "NAME"]

end
p Module.constants.length           # => 89
p Module.constants - $snapshot1     # => ["A"]
p A.constants                       # => ["NAME"]

The book states that the class method constants returns the list of constants for the class (as you can see in the output for A.constants).
I was trying to get the list of constants defined for the Module class when I came across the above strange behavior.

A‘s constants show up in Module.constants. How do I get the list of constants defined by the Module class?

The docs state

Module.constants returns all constants defined in the system. including names of all classes and methods

Since A inherits its implementation from Module.constants, how does it behave differently in the base and derived types?

p A.class               # => Class
p A.class.ancestors       # => [Class, Module, Object, Kernel]

Note: If you’re using Ruby 1.9, constants would return an array of symbols instead of strings.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T22:04:27+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 10:04 pm

    Good question!

    Your confusion is due to the fact that the class method Module.constants hides the instance method Module#constants for Module.

    In Ruby 1.9, this has been addressed by adding an optional parameter:

    # No argument: same class method as in 1.8:
    Module.constants         # ==> All constants
    # One argument: uses the instance method:
    Module.constants(true)   # ==> Constants of Module (and included modules)
    Module.constants(false)  # ==> Constants of Module (only).
    

    In your example above, A.constants calls Module#constants (the instance method), while Module.constants calls, well, Module.constants.

    In Ruby 1.9, you thus want to call Module.constants(true).

    In Ruby 1.8, it is possible to call the instance method #constants on Module. You need to get the instance method and bind it as a class method (using a different name):

    class << Module
      define_method :constants_of_module, Module.instance_method(:constants)
    end
    
    # Now use this new class method:
    class Module
       COOL = 42
    end
    Module.constants.include?("COOL")  # ==> false, as you mention
    Module.constants_of_module         # ==> ["COOL"], the result you want
    

    I wish I was able to backport the 1.9 functionality completely to 1.8 for my backports gem, but I can’t think of a way to get only the constants of a Module, excluding the inherited ones, in Ruby 1.8.

    Edit: Just changed the official documentation to correctly reflect this…

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