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Home/ Questions/Q 361169
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 12, 20262026-05-12T12:52:29+00:00 2026-05-12T12:52:29+00:00

Is there any difference if you define Foo with instance_eval: . . . class

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Is there any difference if you define Foo with instance_eval: . . .

class Foo
    def initialize(&block)
      instance_eval(&block) if block_given?
    end
  end

. . . or with ‘yield self’:

class Foo
  def initialize
    yield self if block_given?
  end
end

In either case you can do this:

x = Foo.new { def foo; 'foo'; end }
x.foo 

So ‘yield self‘ means that the block after Foo.new is always evaluated in the context of the Foo class.

Is this correct?

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-12T12:52:29+00:00Added an answer on May 12, 2026 at 12:52 pm

    Your two pieces of code do very different things. By using instance_eval you’re evaluating the block in the context of your object. This means that using def will define methods on that object. It also means that calling a method without a receiver inside the block will call it on your object.

    When yielding self you’re passing self as an argument to the block, but since your block doesn’t take any arguments, it is simply ignored. So in this case yielding self does the same thing as yielding nothing. The def here behaves exactly like a def outside the block would, yielding self does not actually change what you define the method on. What you could do is:

    class Foo
      def initialize
        yield self if block_given?
      end
    end
    x = Foo.new {|obj| def obj.foo() 'foo' end}
    x.foo
    

    The difference to instance_eval being that you have to specify the receiver explicitly.

    Edit to clarify:

    In the version with yield, obj in the block will be the object that is yielded, which in this case is is the newly created Foo instance. While self will have the same value it had outside the block. With the instance_eval version self inside the block will be the newly created Foo instance.

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