I have discovered a flaw in my understanding of Ruby or programming theory or both. Look at this Code:
#!/usr/bin/ruby -w
@instance_ar = [1,2,3,4]
local_ar = @instance_ar
local_ar_2 = local_ar
###
irrelevant_local_ar = [5,6,7,8]
###
for i in irrelevant_local_ar
local_ar_2.push(i)
end
count = 0
for i in local_ar_2
puts "local_ar_2 value: #{i} and local_ar value: #{local_ar[count]} and @instance_ar value: #{@instance_ar[count]}\n"
count += 1
end
The output of that is
local_ar_2 value: 1 and local_ar value: 1 and @instance_ar value: 1
local_ar_2 value: 2 and local_ar value: 2 and @instance_ar value: 2
local_ar_2 value: 3 and local_ar value: 3 and @instance_ar value: 3
local_ar_2 value: 4 and local_ar value: 4 and @instance_ar value: 4
local_ar_2 value: 5 and local_ar value: 5 and @instance_ar value: 5
local_ar_2 value: 6 and local_ar value: 6 and @instance_ar value: 6
local_ar_2 value: 7 and local_ar value: 7 and @instance_ar value: 7
local_ar_2 value: 8 and local_ar value: 8 and @instance_ar value: 8
Question A: How does push to local_ar_2 change the two other arrays? My understanding of local variables was that once they were created, they should not affect any other variables, being that they were local.
Question B: How can I avoid things like this from happening? Coming from C and Perl this is just blowing my mind.