CSC/ECE 517 Fall 2009/wiki1a 11 f1,
Ruby and Python are both scripting languages whose popularity has sky rocketed in recent years. Both languages are High-Level, Garbage-collected, and Dynamically-typed. Both provide an interactive shell, standard libraries, and persistence support. So, what are the differences?
Points of comparison:
- Language Features
- Web programming environments
- Features exclusive to each
- Advantages of each over statically typed languages
- Projects environments suited to each
Language Features
Private methods and variables
To make methods and instance variables private in Python, one always needs to write __ in front of the name. In Ruby, instance variables are private by default. Methods defined after the method call private are private.
Functions and methods
In Ruby, there are no separate functions and methods; all of them are methods.
string = 'Hello world' puts string.count('o'), string.length # prints 2, 11
In Python, there are separate methods and functions as shown in the example below.
string = 'Hello world' print string.count('o'), len(string) # prints 2, 11 – why not string.len()?
Ruby has reference to class in class body
Ruby:
class MyClass initialize_magick() end
Rubys variant is cleaner, as the magic stuff is done in the class definition, so you see that it’s being done when you look at the class.
Python:
class MyClass: pass initialize_magick(MyClass)
But it’s really not a big deal, because calling the initialise method after the class or as a decorator is really not a major drawback.