In this section, we will learn what the ancestors method is and how to use it in Ruby.
What is ancestors method in Ruby?
The Ruby ancestors method is used to get the list of classes and modules and their priorities on top of a class that a program will search first in order to find a method and invoke it.
Note that we call this method on top of a class that we want to create an object from.
Example: using the ancestors method in Ruby
class Human def print_name puts "Hello from Human class" end end module PrintFullName def print_name puts first_name, last_name, age, id end end class Person < Human include PrintFullName attr_accessor :first_name, :last_name, :age, :id def initialize (first_name, last_name, age, id) self.first_name = first_name self.last_name = last_name self.age = age self.id = id end end prs = Person.new("John","Doe",100, 43221) puts Person.ancestors
Output:
Person PrintFullName Human Object Kernel BasicObject
How does ancestors method work in Ruby?
Here in this example, the order of priorities starts from the Person class and then moves to the PrintFullName then Human, Object, Kernel, and then finally BasicObject.
This means when this program runs, first it’s the Person class that will be searched for a method that is invoked from the object that is created from the Person class.
After that, if the Person class didn’t have the specified method, it’s the PrintFullName module to be checked for the method.
Now if this module also didn’t have the target method, then the program will continue its search for the method in the `Human` class, then Object class and so on until the invoked method is found! Otherwise, if none of them had the specified method, an error will return instead.