What is Ruby On Rails?
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Know the top Ruby On Rails interview questions and answers for freshers and experienced candidates to prepare for job interviews.
Know the top Ruby On Rails interview questions and answers for freshers and experienced candidates to prepare for job interviews.
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This is a simple question based on complex concept. Here’s your chance to show off your theoretical knowledge and demonstrate that you can have an in depth conversation on class hierarchies, inheritance, methods, encapsulation, polymorphism, and more.
Explaining this could take an hour or a few minutes – there’s no single correct answer here, save from being able to demonstrate your familiarity with OOP concepts.
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Class variables are created with the prefix ‘@@’ and are shared by all objects in a class.
Instance variables are created with the prefix ‘@’ and belong to a single object within a class.
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Class variables are created using the @@ prefix to denote the variable as class level.
It works just like any other variable, however in the case of inheritance it works more like a static variable that is accessed across all variable instances.
Another example can be found here:
class DemoClass @@my_var = nil def initialize @@my_var = "hello world" end def my_var puts @@my_var end end class Demo2Class < DemoClass def initialize @@my_var = "goodbye world" end end demo1 = DemoClass.new demo1.my_var demo2 = Demo2Class.new demo2.my_var demo1.my_var The output would be as shown below: hello world goodbye world goodbye world
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Instance variables are defined using single @ symbol.
@foo = "Hello"
Within a class they can be declared as below:
class Animal attr_accessor :name, :age end
Next you can query an object instance to find which instance variables it has.
anim = Animal.new anim.instance_variables => [ ] anim.name="John" anim.age = 3 => [:@age, :@name]
In the above case we did not put the @ symbol before the instance variables but it is implied.
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The ‘&&’ and ‘and’ are both logical and statements. They ‘&&’ operator has higher precedence though. Here’s an example of illustrate this in more detail:
foo = 3 bar = nil a = foo and bar # => nil a # => 3 a = foo && bar # => nil a # => nil
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Create a new file as shown below under: config/initializers/my_constants.rb
COLORS = ['white', 'red', 'green']
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By default all methods are public, except the initialize(constructor) method.
You can make methods private using this declaration within your class:
class MyClass
def method_public_here
end
PRIVATE# all methods that follow will be made private: not accessible for outside objects
def method_private_here
end
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The MVC framework is an age-old architecture pattern that works very well for most applications. Rails has adopted the MVC pattern in its inherent design.
Stated Simply:
a) Model — is where the data is — the database
b) Controller — is where the logic is for the application
c) View — is where the data is used to display to the user
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