What's the difference between @title
and title
? Since both of them can be variable names. Also, how do I decide which kind of variable I should use? With @
or not?
title
is a local variable. They only exists within its scope (current block)
@title
is an instance variable - and is available to all methods within the class.
You can read more here: http://strugglingwithruby.blogspot.dk/2010/03/variables.html
In Ruby on Rails - declaring your variables in your controller as instance variables (@title
) makes them available to your view.
Use @title
in your controllers when you want your variable to be available in your views.
The explanation is that @title
is an instance variable while title
is a local variable. Rails makes instance variables from controllers available to views because the template code (erb, haml, etc) is executed within the scope of the current controller instance.
A tutorial about What is Variable Scope? presents some details quite well, just enclose the related here.
+------------------+----------------------+
| Name Begins With | Variable Scope |
+------------------+----------------------+
| $ | A global variable |
| @ | An instance variable |
| [a-z] or _ | A local variable |
| [A-Z] | A constant |
| @@ | A class variable |
+------------------+----------------------+
The difference is in the scope of the variable. The @version is available to all methods of the class instance.
The short answer, if you're in the controller and you need to make the variable available to the view then use @variable
.
For a much longer answer try this: http://www.ruby-doc.org/docs/ProgrammingRuby/html/tut_classes.html
@variable
s are called instance variables in ruby. Which means you can access these variables in ANY METHOD inside the class. [Across all methods in the class]
Variables without the @
symbol are called local variables, which means you can access these local variables within THAT DECLARED METHOD only. Limited to the local scope.
Example of Instance Variables:
class Customer
def initialize(id, name, addr)
@cust_id = id
@cust_name = name
@cust_addr = addr
end
def display_details
puts "Customer id #{@cust_id}"
puts "Customer name #{@cust_name}"
puts "Customer address #{@cust_addr}"
end
end
In the above example @cust_id
, @cust_name
, @cust_addr
are accessed in another method within the class. But the same thing would not be accessible with local variables.
A local variable is only accessible from within the block of it's initialization. Also a local variable begins with a lower case letter (a-z) or underscore (_).
And instance variable is an instance of self
and begins with a @
Also an instance variable belongs to the object itself. Instance variables are the ones that you perform methods on i.e. .send
etc
example:
@user = User.all
The @user
is the instance variable
And Uninitialized instance variables have a value of Nil
@title
& title
?
@title
or title
@ variables are instance variables, without are local variables.
Read more at http://ruby.about.com/od/variables/a/Instance-Variables.htm
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