This is an excerpt from my book, The Ruby Closures Book. If you like it, consider buying it! <3

Symbol#to_proc is one of the finest examples of the flexibility and beauty of Ruby. This syntax sugar allows us to take a statement such as

words . map { | s | s . length }

and turn it into

words . map & :length

Let’s unravel this syntactical sleight of hand, by figuring out how this works.

What does the &:symbol do?

How does Ruby even know that it has to call a to_proc method, and why is this only specific to the Symbol class?

When Ruby sees an & and an object – any object – it will try to turn it into a block. This is simply form of type coercion.

Take to_s for example. We can do 2.to_s , which returns the string representation of the integer ‘2’. Similarly, to_proc will attempt to turn an object – again, any object – into a proc.

Reimplementing Symbol#to_proc

Let’s see what this means. Let’s create an object, and plop it into each :

obj = Object . new => #<Object:0x007ff4218761b8> [ 1 , 2 , 3 ]. map & obj TypeError : wrong argument type Object ( expected Proc )

That’s awesome! Our error message is telling us exactly what we need to know: it’s saying that obj is well, an Object and not a Proc . The fix is simple: the Object class must have a to_proc method that returns a proc. Let’s do the simplest thing possible:

class Object def to_proc proc {} end end some_obj = Object . new [ 1 , 2 , 3 ]. map & obj #=> [nil, nil, nil]

Now when we run this again, we get no errors. Almost there! How can we then access each element, and say, print it? We need to let out proc accept a parameter:

class Object def to_proc proc { | x | "Here's #{ x } !" } end end some_obj = Object . new [ 1 , 2 , 3 ]. map & obj #=> ["Here's 1!", "Here's 2!", "Here's 3!"]

This hints at a possible implementation of Symbol#to_proc . Let’s start with what we know, and redefine to_proc :

class Symbol def to_proc proc { | obj | obj } end end

We know that in an expression such as

words . map & :length

is equivalent to

words . map { | w | w . length }

Here, the symbol instance is :length . This value of the symbol corresponds to the name of the method. We have previous found out how to access each yielded object – by making the proc return value in to_proc take in an argument.

We want to achieve this effect:

class Symbol def to_proc proc { | obj | obj . length } end end

How can we use the name of the symbol to call a method on obj ? send to the rescue! I hereby present you our own implementation of Symbol#to_proc :

class Symbol def to_proc proc { | obj | obj . send ( self ) } end end

Here, self is the symbol object ( :length in our example), which is exactly what #send expects.

Improving on our Symbol#to_proc

Our initial implementation of Symbol#to_proc is naïve. The reason is that we only consider the obj in the body of the proc , and totally ignore its arguments.

Recall that unlike lambdas, procs are more relaxed when it comes to the number of arguments it is given. We can therefore easily expose this limitation.

First, we return a lambda instead of a proc in to_proc . Recall that a lambda is a proc, so everything should work as per normal:

class Symbol def to_proc lambda { | obj | obj . send ( self ) } end end words = %w(underwear should be worn on the inside) words . map & :length # => [9, 6, 2, 4, 2, 3, 6]

Since we know lambdas are picky when it comes to the number of arguments, is there a method that requires two arguments? Of course: inject/reduce . The usual way of writing reduce is:

[ 1 , 2 , 3 ]. inject ( 0 ) { | result , element | result + element } # => 6

As you can see, the block in inject takes in two arguments. Let’s see how our implementation does, by using the &:symbol notation:

[ 1 , 2 , 3 ]. inject ( & : + )

Here’s the error we get:

ArgumentError : wrong number of arguments ( 2 for 1 ) from ( irb ): 10 :in `block in to_proc' from (irb):14:in ` each ' from (irb):14:in `inject' ...

We can now clearly see that we are missing an argument. The lambda currently accepts only 1 argument, but what it received was 2 arguments. We need to allow the lambda to take in arguments:

class Symbol def to_proc lambda { | obj , args | obj . send ( self , * args ) } end end [ 1 , 2 , 3 ]. inject ( & : + ) # => 6

Now it works as expected! We use the splat operator (that’s the “” in `args`) to support a variable number of arguments. We have one problem though. This doesn’t work anymore:

words = %w(underwear should be worn on the inside) words . map & :length # => [9, 6, 2, 4, 2, 3, 6] ArgumentError : wrong number of arguments ( 1 for 2 ) from ( irb ): 3 :in `block in to_proc' from (irb):8:in ` map ' ...

There are two ways to fix this. First, we can give args a default value:

class Symbol def to_proc lambda { | obj , args = nil | obj . send ( self , * args ) } end end words = %w(underwear should be worn on the inside) words . map & :length # => [9, 6, 2, 4, 2, 3, 6] [ 1 , 2 , 3 ]. inject ( & : + ) # => 6

Or, we can just make it a Proc again:

class Symbol def to_proc proc { | obj , args | obj . send ( self , * args ) } end end words = %w(underwear should be worn on the inside) words . map & :length # => [9, 6, 2, 4, 2, 3, 6] [ 1 , 2 , 3 ]. inject ( & : + ) # => 6

This is one of the rare cases when being less picky about arity helps.

Thanks for Reading!

Hope you learned something – I sure did when putting together the book.