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Home/ Questions/Q 867357
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 15, 20262026-05-15T09:57:43+00:00 2026-05-15T09:57:43+00:00

module MyModule def my_method; ‘hello’; end end class MyClass class << self include MyModule

  • 0
module MyModule 
  def my_method; 'hello'; end
end

class MyClass 
  class << self
    include MyModule
  end 
end

MyClass.my_method   # => "hello

I’m unsure why “include MyModule” needs to be in the singleton class in order to be called using just MyClass.

Why can’t I go:

X = MyClass.new
X.my_method
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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-15T09:57:43+00:00Added an answer on May 15, 2026 at 9:57 am

    include ModuleName adds the methods from the module as instance methods to the including class.

    So if you write

    class MyClass
      include MyModule
    end
    

    then my_method becomes an instance method on MyClass e.g.

    m = MyClass.new
    m.my_method # => "hello"
    

    When you include the module inside the singleton class the methods are still being added as instance methods but to the instance of the class Class for your class. Therefore they appear as class methods on MyClass.

    EDIT (Jörg W Mittag): However, you should never do that, since including in the singleton class is the same as extending the original object, which is preferred. So, this:

    class MyClass
      class << self
        include MyModule
      end
    end
    

    is the same as this:

    class MyClass
      extend MyModule
    end
    

    You should always use the latter form.

    More generally, this:

    foo = Object.new
    class << foo
      include MyModule
    end
    

    is the same as this:

    foo = Object.new
    foo.extend MyModule
    

    EDIT (MAL): If you want to have you method both as an instance method and a method, you can simply define your method as above, and either extend self which will bring all instance methods accessible to the module object itself, or alternatively use module_function :my_method.

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