While working with the Ruby gem Pundit, I realized I was unsure of the way some namespacing works within Ruby and I do not like mysteries/uncertainties in my mind.
Pundit suggests you set up an application_policy.rb as so:
class ApplicationPolicy
class Scope
.
.
.
end
end
What actually is happening inside of the class doesn't matter, just the structure of the classes do.
Then you specify a policy for a particular resource that inherits from ApplicationPolicy, say post_policy.rb as so:
class PostPolicy < ApplicationPolicy
class Scope < Scope
end
end
My general question is, inside my PostPolicy, when I declare that Scope < Scope, what does the parent Scope refer to? Does it automatically get namespaced within the parent of the outer class? So is it essentially the same as inheriting from ApplicationPolicy::Scope? I am having trouble finding a way to answer this on my own, thanks!
Short answer
You are right on both counts. You can check it with
Class#ancestors:Equivalent code
The above code is exactly the same as :
Note that
PostPolicy::Scopedoesn't inherit fromPostPolicy. They are independant classes, the former just happens to be defined in the namespace of the latter.Another way to check
fails with :
It means that
Scopemust come fromAnamespace.