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Home/ Questions/Q 381619
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 12, 20262026-05-12T15:06:11+00:00 2026-05-12T15:06:11+00:00

Let’s say I have a singleton class like this: class Settings include Singleton def

  • 0

Let’s say I have a singleton class like this:

class Settings
  include Singleton

  def timeout
    # lazy-load timeout from config file, or whatever
  end
end

Now if I want to know what timeout to use I need to write something like:

Settings.instance.timeout

but I’d rather shorten that to

Settings.timeout

One obvious way to make this work would be to modify the implementation of Settings to:

class Settings
  include Singleton

  def self.timeout
    instance.timeout
  end

  def timeout
    # lazy-load timeout from config file, or whatever
  end
end

That works, but it would be rather tedious to manually write out a class method for each instance method. This is ruby, there must be a clever-clever dynamic way to do this.

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-12T15:06:11+00:00Added an answer on May 12, 2026 at 3:06 pm

    One way to do it is like this:

    require 'singleton'
    class Settings
      include Singleton
    
      # All instance methods will be added as class methods
      def self.method_added(name) 
         instance_eval %Q{
           def #{name}
             instance.send '#{name}'
           end
         }
      end 
    
    
      def timeout
        # lazy-load timeout from config file, or whatever
      end
    end
    
    Settings.instance.timeout
    Settings.timeout
    

    If you want more fine grained control on which methods to delegate, then you can use delegation techniques:

    require 'singleton'
    require 'forwardable'
    class Settings
      include Singleton
      extend SingleForwardable
    
      # More fine grained control on specifying what methods exactly 
      # to be class methods
      def_delegators :instance,:timeout,:foo#, other methods
    
      def timeout
        # lazy-load timeout from config file, or whatever
      end
    
      def foo
        # some other stuff
      end
    
    end
    
    Settings.timeout
    
    Settings.foo
    

    On the other side, I recommend using modules if the intended functionality is limited to behavior, such a solution would be:

    module Settings
      extend self 
    
      def timeout
        # lazy-load timeout from config file, or whatever
      end
    
    end
    
    Settings.timeout
    
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