I'm just trying to access a .rb file from the some directory and a tutorial is telling me to use this code but I don't see how it is finding the gem file.
you see Gemfile, which leads me to believe that File.expand_path("../../Gemfile", __FILE__) references following file: /path/to/this/file/../../Gemfile
is a somewhat ugly Ruby idiom for getting the absolute path to a file when you know the path relative to the current file. Another way of writing it is this:
both are ugly, but the first variant is shorter. The first variant is, however, also very non-intuitive until you get the hang of it. Why the extra ..? (but the second variant may give a clue as to why it is needed).
This is how it works: File.expand_path returns the absolute path of the first argument, relative to the second argument (which defaults to the current working directory). __FILE__ is the path to the file the code is in. Since the second argument in this case is a path to a file, and File.expand_path assumes a directory, we have to stick an extra .. in the path to get the path right. This is how it works:
File.expand_path is basically implemented like this (in the following code path will have the value of ../../Gemfile and relative_to will have the value of /path/to/file.rb):
def File.expand_path(path, relative_to=Dir.getwd)
# first the two arguments are concatenated, with the second argument first
absolute_path = File.join(relative_to, path)
while absolute_path.include?('..')
# remove the first occurrence of /<something>/..
absolute_path = absolute_path.sub(%r{/[^/]+/\.\.}, '')
end
absolute_path
end
(there's a little bit more to it, it expands ~ to the home directory and so on -- there are probably also some other issues with the code above)
Stepping through a call to the code above absolute_path will first get the value /path/to/file.rb/../../Gemfile, then for each round in the loop the first .. will be removed, along with the path component before it. First /file.rb/.. is removed, then on the next round /to/.. is removed, and we get /path/Gemfile.
To make a long story short, File.expand_path('../../Gemfile', __FILE__) is a trick to get the absolute path of a file when you know the path relative to the current file. The extra .. in the relative path is to eliminate the name of the file in __FILE__.
In Ruby 2.0 there is a Kernel function called __dir__ that is implemented as File.dirname(File.realpath(__FILE__)).