no… super calls the method of the parent class, if it exists. Also, as @EnabrenTane pointed out, it passes all the arguments to the parent class method as well.
More Related Contents:
- What does map(&:name) mean in Ruby?
- How to sort an array in descending order in Ruby
- Ruby: require vs require_relative – best practice to workaround running in both Ruby =1.9.2
- What does the “map” method do in Ruby?
- What is the best way to convert an array to a hash in Ruby
- Why is the shovel operator (
- What does the question mark at the end of a method name mean in Ruby?
- Installing Nokogiri on OSX 10.10 Yosemite
- Automatic counter in Ruby for each?
- How to deal with the sum of rounded percentage not being 100?
- Ruby method lookup path for an object
- What evaluates to false in Ruby?
- How do I temporarily redirect stderr in Ruby?
- Confusion with Atomic Grouping – how it differs from the Grouping in regular expression of Ruby?
- Extract number from string in Ruby
- Is there a way to remove the BOM from a UTF-8 encoded file?
- Using layouts in HAML files independently of Rails
- How to implement a short URL like the URLs in Twitter?
- How to run untrusted Ruby code inside a safe sandbox?
- ‘||=’ operator in Ruby
- How to create directories recursively in ruby?
- When do Ruby instance variables get set?
- Is order of a Ruby hash literal guaranteed?
- Running a Ruby Program as a Windows Service?
- Where is it legal to use ruby splat operator?
- Net::ReadTimeout (Net::ReadTimeout) Selenium Ruby
- what does @ stand for in a Ruby function name
- How to get class instances in Ruby? [duplicate]
- In Ruby, why does nil[1]=1 evaluate to nil?
- Rails ‘parse_query’ error on server in brand new app