Project

General

Profile

Actions

Feature #8393

closed

A class who's parent class is in a module can go wrong if files are required in the wrong order

Added by eLobato (Daniel Lobato Garcia) almost 11 years ago. Updated almost 11 years ago.

Status:
Rejected
Assignee:
-
Target version:
-
[ruby-core:54921]

Description

Hi,

I have found that inheritance is not done properly in a certain case. Let's say we have the following files:


animal.rb -

class Animal
def bark
puts 'fuck.'
end
end

dog.rb -

module Bark
class Dog < Animal
end
end

bark.rb -

module Bark
class Animal
def bark
puts 'woof'
end
end
end

If these files are required in that order (or any order where Bark::Animal is not required before Animal), Bark::Dog.new.bark will output "fuck.", showing the inheritance was done wrong, because in the case that there are two classes from which it can inherit (Animal and Bark::Animal), it should inherit from the class inside its module (Bark).

A workaround for this is defining Dog as Dog < Bark::Animal, that forces Dog to use the correct Animal class.

I found this on the latest 1.8.7, 1.9.2, 1.9.3 and 2.0.0dev, both using rvm and without using it. I could not find information about this on the issue tracker or on Google.

In my opinion a way to fix this is to check when a file is required if any of our current files could inherit from something in a module of the file that is imported, but that looks like it can be complicated with nested modules, etc.. so I'm all ears for better design decisions.

I would like to fix this myself as my first Ruby core contribution, but I was unsure if this is an actual bug. To me it looks like this behavior is totally unexpected, let me know if anything is wrong here.

Thanks!

Actions

Also available in: Atom PDF

Like0
Like0Like0Like0Like0Like0Like0Like0Like0Like0Like0Like0Like0Like0Like0