Possible Duplicate:
Ruby block and unparenthesized arguments
I'm not sure I understand this syntax error. I'm using Carrierwave to manage some file uploads in a Rails app, and I seem to be passing a block to one of the methods incorrectly.
Here's the example in the Carrierwave Docs:
version :thumb do
process :resize_to_fill => [200,200]
end
Here's what I had:
version :full { process(:resize_to_limit => [960, 960]) }
version :half { process(:resize_to_limit => [470, 470]) }
version :third { process(:resize_to_limit => [306, 306]) }
version :fourth { process(:resize_to_limit => [176, 176]) }
The above doesn't work, I get syntax error, unexpected '}', expecting keyword_end
. Interestingly enough, the following works perfectly:
version :full do process :resize_to_limit => [960, 960]; end
version :half do process :resize_to_limit => [470, 470]; end
version :third do process :resize_to_limit => [306, 306]; end
version :fourth do process :resize_to_limit => [176, 176]; end
So, my question is, why can I pass a block using do...end
but not braces in this instance?
Thanks!
Try this:
version(:full) { process(:resize_to_limit => [960, 960]) }
version(:half) { process(:resize_to_limit => [470, 470]) }
version(:third) { process(:resize_to_limit => [306, 306]) }
version(:fourth) { process(:resize_to_limit => [176, 176]) }
You have a precedence problem. The { }
block binds tighter than a do...end
block and tighter than a method call; the result is that Ruby thinks you're trying to supply a block as an argument to a symbol and says no.
You can see a clearer (?) or possibly more familar example by comparing the following:
[1, 2, 3].inject 0 { |x, y| x + y }
[1, 2, 3].inject(0) { |x, y| x + y }
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