To Ruby From Python
Python is another very nice general purpose programming language. Going from Python to Ruby, you’ll find that there’s a little bit more syntax to learn than with Python.
Similarities
As with Python, in Ruby,...- There’s an interactive prompt (called
irb). - You can read docs on the command line (with the
ricommand instead ofpydoc). - There are no special line terminators (except the usual newline).
- String literals can span multiple lines like Python’s triple-quoted strings.
- Brackets are for lists, and braces are for dicts (which, in Ruby, are called “hashes”).
- Arrays work the same (adding them makes one long array, but composing
them like this
a3 = [ a1, a2 ]gives you an array of arrays). - Objects are strongly and dynamically typed.
- Everything is an object, and variables are just references to objects.
- Although the keywords are a bit different, exceptions work about the same.
- You’ve got embedded doc tools (Ruby’s is called rdoc).
Differences
Unlike Python, in Ruby,...- Strings are mutable.
- You can make constants (variables whose value you don’t intend to change).
- There are some enforced case-conventions (ex. class names start with a capital letter, variables start with a lowercase letter).
- There’s only one kind of list container (an Array), and it’s mutable.
- Double-quoted strings allow escape sequences (like \t) and
a special “expression substitution” syntax (which allows you to insert
the results of Ruby expressions directly into other strings without
having to
"add " + "strings " + "together"). Single-quoted strings are like Python’sr"raw strings". - There are no “new style” and “old style” classes. Just one kind.
- You never directly access attributes. With Ruby, it’s all method calls.
- Parentheses for method calls are usually optional.
- There’s
public,private, andprotectedto enforce access, instead of Python’s_voluntary_underscore__convention__. - “mixin’s” are used instead of multiple inheritance.
- You can re-open a class anytime and add more methods.
- You’ve got
trueandfalseinstead ofTrueandFalse(andnilinstead ofNone). - When tested for truth, only
falseandnilevaluate to a false value. Everything else is true (including0,0.0,"", and[]). - It’s
elsifinstead ofelif. - It’s
requireinstead ofimport. Otherwise though, usage is the same. - The usual-style comments on the line(s) above things (instead of docstrings below them) are used for generating docs.
- There are a number of shortcuts that, although give you more to remember, you quickly learn. They tend to make Ruby fun and very productive.
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