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Home/ Questions/Q 8224761
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 7, 20262026-06-07T15:10:56+00:00 2026-06-07T15:10:56+00:00

I’ve been looking at some ruby code and noticed that some people treat methods

  • 0

I’ve been looking at some ruby code and noticed that some people treat methods like variables or constants.

class Test

   def welcome_message
      "Hello World"
   end

   def greet_user
      p welcome_message
   end
end

And then you might write a new class that inherits from this Test class, but change how it behaves.

class New_Test < Test

   # changing the welcome message
   def welcome_message
      "Greetings"
   end
end

When is it an appropriate time to do something like this? It appears to allow you to write more flexible code since I can perform more complex computations before returning a value, but I can’t come up with a way to justify writing a piece of code like the two Test classes above.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-07T15:10:57+00:00Added an answer on June 7, 2026 at 3:10 pm

    Why It Works

    In Ruby, every method returns a value. In your given example of p welcome_message you are asking Ruby to print the string representation of the return value of #welcome_message. (Technically it’s writing object.inspect to standard output, but it amounts to the same thing here.)

    If “Hello World” were something other object than a String, the result would still be similar. For example, if #welcome_method returned a Fixnum instead of a String, it would still appear to be printing a string.

    Return Values

    You could store your message in a class or instance variable, or use getter or setter methods on an object. However, sometimes it’s simply more convenient to use a return value directly in an expression rather than using a variable for intermediate storage.

    Instead of storing and then dereferencing a variable like this:

    def welcome_message
      @message = "Hello World"
    end
    
    def greet_user
      p @message
    end
    
    welcome_message # store the variable
    greet_user      # dereference then print the variable
    

    you can just use the return value from #welcome_message directly.

    This is unlikely to matter much in a contrived example like the one in the original question, but it may save time, effort, or memory in larger applications. Even if not, intermediate variables can be a source of bugs or programmer error, and it’s often just semantically clearer to use the values directly.

    While this doesn’t apply to your limited example, it’s also a better practice to use an object’s public interface to request information. In such cases, methods that return values are essential.

    Ruby is not an orthogonal language; there’s usually more than one valid way to do something. In the end, it’s about the semantics of what you’re trying to express in your code.

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