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Home/ Questions/Q 740405
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 14, 20262026-05-14T08:30:44+00:00 2026-05-14T08:30:44+00:00

I’m having a little problem with constant scope in mixin modules. Let’s say I

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I’m having a little problem with constant scope in mixin modules. Let’s say I have something like this

module Auth

  USER_KEY = "user" unless defined? USER_KEY

  def authorize
    user_id = session[USER_KEY]
  def

end

The USER_KEY constant should default to “user” unless it’s already defined. Now I might mix this into a couple of places, but in one of those places the USER_KEY needs to be different, so we might have something like this

class ApplicationController < ActionController::Base

  USER_KEY = "my_user"

  include Auth

  def test_auth
    authorize
  end

end

I would expect that USER_KEY would be “my_user” when used in authorize, since it’s already defined, but it’s still “user”, taken from the modules definition of USER_KEY. Anyone have any idea how to get authorize to use the classes version of USER_KEY?

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-14T08:30:44+00:00Added an answer on May 14, 2026 at 8:30 am

    The USER_KEY you declared (even conditionally) in Auth is globally known as Auth::USER_KEY. It doesn’t get “mixed in” to including modules, though including modules can reference the key in a non-fully-qualified fashion.

    If you want each including module (e.g. ApplicationController) to be able to define its own USER_KEY, try this:

    module Auth
      DEFAULT_USER_KEY = 'user'
      def self.included(base)
        unless base.const_defined?(:USER_KEY)
          base.const_set :USER_KEY, Auth::DEFAULT_USER_KEY
        end
      end
      def authorize
        user_id = session[self.class.const_get(:USER_KEY)]
      end
    end
    
    class ApplicationController < ActionController::Base
      USER_KEY = 'my_user'
      include Auth
    end
    

    If you’re going to go to all this trouble, though, you might as well just make it a class method:

    module Auth
      DEFAULT_USER_KEY = 'user'
      def self.included(base)
        base.extend Auth::ClassMethods
        base.send :include, Auth::InstanceMethods
      end
      module ClassMethods
        def user_key
          Auth::DEFAULT_USER_KEY
        end
      end
      module InstanceMethods
        def authorize
          user_id = session[self.class.user_key]
        end
      end
    end
    
    class ApplicationController < ActionController::Base
      def self.user_key
        'my_user'
      end
    end
    

    or a class-level accessor:

    module Auth
      DEFAULT_USER_KEY = 'user'
      def self.included(base)
        base.send :attr_accessor :user_key unless base.respond_to?(:user_key=)
        base.user_key ||= Auth::DEFAULT_USER_KEY
      end
      def authorize
        user_id = session[self.class.user_key]
      end
    end
    
    class ApplicationController < ActionController::Base
      include Auth
      self.user_key = 'my_user'
    end
    
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