Proc.new and Kernel#proc have a little known feature: if called without a block, they capture whatever block was passed to the current method.
I propose that this feature should be removed, finally, since it:
Doesn't enhance readability (where is this block coming from?)
Doesn't reflect any other behavior in Ruby
Can lead to bugs (call either without a block accidentally and you aren't sure what you'll get)
I believe this was an implementation artifact in MRI, since the most recently-pushed block would still be on global stacks, which is where the logic for proc and Proc.new looked for it.
All argument syntaxes now support &block, which I believe is the correct way to clearly, explicitly capture the incoming block into an object.
Note that the documentation still specifies the old behavior in 3.0.0.
Creates a new Proc object, bound to the current context. ::new may be called without a block only within a method with an attached block, in which case that block is converted to the Proc object.