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Ruby doesn't lean too heavily on the dependency injection pattern, but it's still something you can see occur in many forms.
In other languages with a more formal implementation of this where it occurs is much more obvious, but in Ruby there's a very smooth gradient between light applications of this, like mixin methods from modules, to entire frameworks built around it, like Rails, and everything in-between.
So basically dependency injection is rarely forced on you, but it's there if you need it, and you can do it however you want.
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Ruby doesn't lean too heavily on the dependency injection pattern, but it's still something you can see occur in many forms.
In other languages with a more formal implementation of this where it occurs is much more obvious, but in Ruby there's a very smooth gradient between light applications of this, like mixin methods from modules, to entire frameworks built around it, like Rails, and everything in-between.
So basically dependency injection is rarely forced on you, but it's there if you need it, and you can do it however you want.