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Home/ Questions/Q 200023
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 11, 20262026-05-11T17:04:30+00:00 2026-05-11T17:04:30+00:00

Saw this piece of code in a Ruby on Rails book. This first one

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Saw this piece of code in a Ruby on Rails book. This first one is from a view and the second one is a helper module. I don’t understand how that &block and the attributes={} thing work. Can anyone guide me to a tutorial of some kind explaining this?

<% hidden_div_if(@cart.items.empty?, :id => "cart") do %>
 <%= render(:partial => "cart", :object => @cart) %>
<% end %>

module StoreHelper
 def hidden_div_if(condition, attributes = {}, &block)
  if condition
   attributes["style"] = "display: none"
  end
   content_tag("div", attributes, &block)
  end
end
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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-11T17:04:31+00:00Added an answer on May 11, 2026 at 5:04 pm

    Blocks are a fairly basic part of ruby. They’re delimited by either do |arg0,arg1| ... end or { |arg0,arg1,arg2| ... }.

    They allow you to specify a callback to pass to a method.
    This callback can be invoked two ways – either by capturing
    it by specifying a final argument prefixed with &, or by
    using the yield keyword:

    irb> def meth_captures(arg, &block)
           block.call( arg, 0 ) + block.call( arg.reverse , 1 )
         end
    #=> nil
    irb> meth_captures('pony') do |word, num|
           puts "in callback! word = #{word.inspect}, num = #{num.inspect}"
           word + num.to_s
         end
    in callback! word = "pony" num = 0
    in callback! word = "ynop" num = 1
    #=> "pony0ynop1" 
    irb> def meth_yields(arg)
           yield(arg, 0) + yield(arg.upcase, 1)
         end
    #=> nil
    irb> meth_yields('frog') do |word, num|
           puts "in callback! word = #{word.inspect}, num = #{num.inspect}"
           word + num.to_s
         end
    in callback! word = "frog", num = 0
    in callback! word = "FROG", num = 1
    #=> "frog0FROG1"
    

    Note that our callback was the same in each case – we can remove
    repetition by saving our callback in an object, and then passing it to each
    method. This can be done using lambda to capture the callback in an object,
    and then passed to a method by prefixing it with &.

    irb> callback = lambda do |word, num|
           puts "in callback! word = #{word.inspect}, num = #{num.inspect}"
           word + num.to_s
         end
    #=> #<Proc:0x0052e3d8@(irb):22>
    irb> meth_captures('unicorn', &callback)
    in callback! word = "unicorn", num = 0
    in callback! word = "nrocinu", num = 1
    #=> "unicorn0nrocinu1"
    irb> meth_yields('plate', &callback)
    in callback! word = "plate", num = 0
    in callback! word = "PLATE", num = 1
    #=> "plate0PLATE1"
    

    It’s important to understand the different uses of & here as a prefix to the last argument of a function

    • in a function definition, it captures any passed block into that object
    • in a function call, it expands the given callback object into a block

    If you look around blocks are used all over the place, especially in iterators, like Array#each.

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