class_eval
doesn't really have anything to do with class << className
.
A.class_eval do
...
end
is equivalent to
class A
...
end
with a few differences. class_eval uses a block (or a string, but ignoring that for the moment) which means it closes over the containing lexical scope. In other words you can use local variables from the surrounding scope. The common class block introduces a brand new scope. Likewise you can create the block and pass it to many different class_eval's, and the body of the block will be executed in the context of the class you are calling class_eval on.
class << className
opens the singleton class of className
, allowing you to define class methods.
class << A
def foo
...
end
end
Is the same as
def A.foo
...
end
Note that they are oly class methods if A happens to be a class (almost) all objects in ruby have singleton classes and you can define methods for them using either of those two syntaxes. The advantage of class << obj
is mainly if you're defining many singleton methods in one go.