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Asked: May 11, 20262026-05-11T12:08:14+00:00 2026-05-11T12:08:14+00:00

To my surprise as I am developing more interest towards dynamic languages like Ruby

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To my surprise as I am developing more interest towards dynamic languages like Ruby and Python. The claim is that they are 100% object oriented but as I read on several basic concepts like interfaces, method overloading, operator overloading are missing. Is it somehow in-built under the cover or do these languages just not need it? If the latter is true are, they 100% object oriented?

EDIT: Based on some answers I see that overloading is available in both Python and Ruby, is it the case in Ruby 1.8.6 and Python 2.5.2 ??

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  1. 2026-05-11T12:08:15+00:00Added an answer on May 11, 2026 at 12:08 pm

    Thanks to late binding, they do not need it. In Java/C#, interfaces are used to declare that some class has certain methods and it is checked during compile time; in Python, whether a method exists is checked during runtime.

    Method overloading in Python does work:

    >>> class A: ...  def foo(self): ...    return 'A' ... >>> class B(A): ...  def foo(self): ...    return 'B' ... >>> B().foo() 'B' 

    Are they object-oriented? I’d say yes. It’s more of an approach thing rather than if any concrete language has feature X or feature Y.

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