Intentar ORO - Gratis

COMFORT OBJECT

WIRED

|

January / February 2026

Ruby survives on affection, not utility.

- BY SHEON HAN

COMFORT OBJECT

MY LITTLE THEORY is that the concept of “imprinting” in psychology can just as easily be applied to programming: Much as a baby goose decides that the first moving life-form it encounters is its parent, embryonic programmers form ineradicable attachments to the patterns and quiddities of their first formative language.

For many people, that language is Ruby. It’s often credited with making programming “click”; imprintees speak of it with a certain indebtedness and affection. I get that. I wrote my first “Hello world” in an awful thing called Java, but programming only began to feel intuitive when I learned JavaScript (I know, I know) and OCaml—both of which fundamentally shaped my tastes.

I arrived somewhat late to Ruby. It wasn’t until my fourth job that I found myself on a team that mainly used it. By then, I’d heard enough paeans to its elegance that I was full of anticipation, ready to be charmed, to experience the kind of professional satori its adherents described. My dislike for it was immediate.

To arrive at a language late is to see it without the forgiving haze of sentimentality that comes with imprinting—the fond willingness to overlook a flaw as a quirk. What I saw wasn’t a bejeweled tool but a poor little thing that hadn’t quite gotten the news that the world of programming had moved on.

RUBY WAS CREATED in 1995 by the Japanese programmer Yukihiro Matsumoto, affectionately called “Matz.” Aside from creating the only major programming language to have originated outside the West, this Osaka-born practicing Mormon is also known for being exceptionally nice, so much so that the Ruby community adopted the motto MINASWAN, for “Matz Is Nice And So We Are Nice.”

Befitting this, as well as its pretty name, Ruby is easy on the eyes. Its syntax is simple, free of semicolons or brackets. More so even than Python—a language known for its readability—Ruby reads almost like plain English.

MÁS HISTORIAS DE WIRED

WIRED

WIRED

SPIT ON, SWORN AT, AND UNDETERRED: WHAT IT'S LIKE TO OWN A CYBERTRUCK

WIRED spoke to seven Tesla Cybertruck owners about their most controversial purchase and why they're proud to drive it.

time to read

3 mins

January / February 2026

WIRED

WIRED

COMFORT OBJECT

Ruby survives on affection, not utility.

time to read

4 mins

January / February 2026

WIRED

WIRED

SLEEP DREAMS

Margaret Thatcher, who was known for sleeping only four hours a night, is often credited with saying “sleep is for wimps!” But sleep is actually work. Putting down the phone, setting aside personal or political worries—these require discipline. True relaxation calls for training.

time to read

4 mins

January / February 2026

WIRED

WIRED

THE FIGHT OF HER LIFE

Surrogate pregnancy is all the rage in Silicon Valley and beyond. What happens when it goes horribly wrong?

time to read

25 mins

November - December 2025

WIRED

WIRED

SPACE EMPEROR

ELON MUSK CONTROLS THOUSANDS OF INTERNET SATELLITES AND MORE THAN HALF THE WORLD'S ROCKET LAUNCHES. CAN ANYONE STOP HIM?

time to read

20 mins

November - December 2025

WIRED

THE IMPROBABLE

Tech billionaire Mike Lynch made probability his life's work, until his wildly unlikely death at sea. Now, many of his friends and associates-and survivors of the disaster-are speaking about what happened for the first time.

time to read

25 mins

November - December 2025

WIRED

OUT WITH THE OLD

Introducing WIRED's 2025 Political Power Users-the 22 very online creators, podcasters, and pundits who will blow up the next electoral era.

time to read

14 mins

November - December 2025

WIRED

POLITICS GETS WIRED

IT'S BEEN ONE year since Donald Trump took back the White House.

time to read

2 mins

November - December 2025

WIRED

WIRED

FAHRENHEIT 5G

INSIDE THE MIND OF THE MOST PROLIFIC VIOLENCE OF OUR ERA. ANTI-TECHNOLOGY ARSONIST IN AMERICAAND THE CONSPIRACY-DRIVEN POLITICAL

time to read

23 mins

November - December 2025

WIRED

WIRED

KAT'S OUT OF THE BAG

At 26 years old, Kat Abughazaleh thinks she's uniquely qualified for Congress. But running for office is a different sort of influencing.

time to read

13 mins

November - December 2025

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size