I have this to work with:
[
["app1", {"name"=>"name1", "path"=>"xyz.com/"}],
["app2", {"name"=>"name2", "path"=>"xyz.com/"}],
["app3", {"name"=>"name3", "path"=>"xyz.com/"}],
# etc.
]
I want to be able to access each name and path so I tried:
apps.each do |key, value|
value.each do |key, value|
puts value
end
end
but this returns an Enumerator. Any idea how I can do this?
apps = [["app1", {"name"=>"name1", "path"=>"https://xyz.com/"}], ["app2", {"name"=>"name2", "path"=>"https:/xyz.com/"}], ["app3", {"name"=>"name3", "path"=>"https://xyz.com/"}]]
apps.flatten.each do |t|
next unless t.class == Hash
next unless t.key?("name")
next unless t.key?("path")
puts t.inspect # now t is a hash that has both "name" and "path" keys - do what you want
end
This will handle even a bit more complex cases when you have different structure for different elements.
I think your first each loop is only looping over an array, so it would be:
apps.each do |app|
app.each do |key, value|
puts key # would be app1 in the first array
puts value["name"]
puts value["path"]
end
end
ar = [
["app1", {"name"=>"name1", "path"=>"xyz.com/"}],
["app2", {"name"=>"name2", "path"=>"xyz.com/"}],
["app3", {"name"=>"name3", "path"=>"xyz.com/"}]
]
#Get a specific app:
p ar.assoc("app2").last["name"]
#Get all names and paths
ar.each{|app| name, path = app.last["name"], app.last["path"]}
Related
Is there a more elegant way to write this code?
def create_a_hash_from_a_collection
my_hash = {}
collection_of_hashes.each do |key, value|
my_hash[key] = {} if my_hash[key].nil?
my_hash[key] = value
end
my_hash
end
The line that seems clumsy to me is this:
my_hash[key] = {} if my_hash[key].nil?
Is there a shorthand way of expressing it?
If you want to have a brand new hash for each key in your initial hash you need to initialise it with a block:
hash = Hash.new { |hash, key| hash[key] = {} }
hash[:foo].object_id == hash[:bar].object_id #=> false
Otherwise, if you do this, It will be always the same default hash
hash = Hash.new({})
hash[:foo].object_id == hash[:bar].object_id #=> true
You can use ||= operator which does exactly what you want
my_hash[key] ||= {}
The rest of my answer here is because I'm not sure what a "collection of hashes" is, so my best guess is that it would be an array of hashes. If I'm wrong, let me know and disregard the rest of this answer.
It seems that the rest of your method may not do what it sounds like you're trying to do. Consider:
#collection_of_hashes = [{foo: 'bar'}, {baz: 'qux'}]
def create_a_hash_from_a_collection
my_hash = {}
#collection_of_hashes.each do |key, value|
# this is not actually doing anything here and returns same with or
# without the following line
# my_hash[key] ||= {}
my_hash[key] = value
end
my_hash
end
#=> {{:foo=>"bar"}=>nil, {:baz=>"qux"}=>nil}
But what you probably want is
def create_a_hash_from_a_collection
my_hash = {}
#collection_of_hashes.each do |hash|
hash.keys.each do |k|
my_hash[k] = hash[k]
end
end
my_hash
end
#=> {:foo=>"bar", :baz=>"qux"}
But also keep in mind, if any of your "collection of hashes" which we would tend to assume would be an array of hashes, contain the same key, which one wins? This code, it would be the last item in the array's key value. What is the actual goal of your method?
I guess what you want is to initialise your my_hash with a default value, so then you don't need to check if it's nil or not.
That can be done using the Hash.new constructor, compare:
my_hash = {}
puts my_hash['no_existing_key'] #=> nil
my_hash = Hash.new({})
puts my_hash['no_existing_key'] #=> {}
You then can reduce your code to:
def create_a_hash_from_a_collection
my_hash = Hash.new({})
collection_of_hashes.each do |key, value|
my_hash[key] = value
end
my_hash
end
Since you are assigning value anyway, maybe you could use my_hash[key] = value || {}?
So, if value to assign is nil, the value of that key becomes {}.
Write a function that accepts a multi-dimensional container of any size and converts it into a one dimensional associative array whose keys are strings representing their value's path in the original container.
So { 'one' => {'two' => 3, 'four' => [ 5,6,7]}, 'eight'=> {'nine'=> {'ten'=>11}}}
would become
:
"{'one/two' => 3,'one/four/0' => 5, 'one/four/1' => 6, 'one/four/2' => 7, 'eight/nine/ten' : 11}"
I've gotten this so far... But am having a lot of issues. Any pointers to things I am overlooking?
def oneDimHash(hash)
if hash.is_a?(Fixnum)
puts "AHHH"
else
hash.each_pair do |key,value|
if value.is_a?(Hash)
#temp_key << key << '/'
oneDimHash(value)
elsif value.is_a?(Array)
value.each_with_index do |val,index|
puts index
#temp_key << "#{index}"
oneDimHash(val)
end
else
#temp_key << key
#result["#{#temp_key}"] = "#{value}"
#temp_key = ''
end
end
end
end
It's immediately suspect to me that you are using instance variables instead of method arguments / local variables. Very likely that is producing messed-up keys, at least. Supposing that the method signature cannot be modified, you can work around the need for additional arguments by delegating to a helper function. Perhaps I'd try an approach along these lines:
def oneDimHash(o)
oneDimHashInternal("", o, {})
end
def oneDimHashInternal(keyStem, o, hash)
if o.is_a? Hash
o.each_pair do |key, value|
oneDimHashInternal("#{keystem}/#{key}", value, hash)
end
elsif o.is_a? Array
# Work this out for yourself
else
# Store the (non-container) object in hash
# Work this out for yourself
end
hash
end
Note also that there are Enumerables that are neither Arrays nor Hashes. I don't know whether you need to account for such.
How about this?
def oneDimHash(obj,parent="")
unless obj.is_a?(Hash)
puts "AHHH" # or may be better: raise "AHHH"
else
obj.flat_map do |key,value|
combined_key = [parent,key.to_s].join '/'
case value
when Hash then oneDimHash(value,combined_key).to_a
when Array then value.each_with_index.map { |v,i| [combined_key+"/#{i}",v] }
else [ [combined_key,value] ]
end
end.to_h
end
end
I have a terribly nested Json response.
[[{:test=>[{:id=>1, :b=>{id: '2'}}]}]]
There's more arrays than that but you get the idea.
Is there a way to recursively search through and find all the items that have a key I need?
I tried using this function extract_list() but it doesn't handle arrays well.
def nested_find(obj, needed_keys)
return {} unless obj.is_a?(Array) || obj.is_a?(Hash)
obj.inject({}) do |hash, val|
if val.is_a?(Hash) && (tmp = needed_keys & val.keys).length > 0
tmp.each { |key| hash[key] = val[key] }
elsif val.is_a?(Array)
hash.merge!(obj.map { |v| nested_find(v, needed_keys) }.reduce(:merge))
end
hash
end
end
Example
needed_keys = [:id, :another_key]
nested_find([ ['test', [{id:1}], [[another_key: 5]]]], needed_keys)
# {:id=>1, :another_key=>5}
The following is not what I'd suggest, but just to give a brief alternative to the other solutions provided:
2.1.1 :001 > obj = [[{:test=>[{:id=>1, :b=>{id: '2'}}]}]]
=> [[{:test=>[{:id=>1, :b=>{:id=>"2"}}]}]]
2.1.1 :002 > key = :id
=> :id
2.1.1 :003 > obj.inspect.scan(/#{key.inspect}=>([^,}]*)[,}]/).flatten.map {|s| eval s}
=> [1, "2"]
Note: use of eval here is just for an example. It would fail/produce incorrect results on anything whose inspect value was not eval-able back to the same instance, and it can execute malicious code:
You'll need to write your own recursive handler. Assuming that you've already converted your JSON to a Ruby data structure (via JSON.load or whatnot):
def deep_find_value_with_key(data, desired_key)
case data
when Array
data.each do |value|
if found = deep_find_value_with_key value, desired_key
return found
end
end
when Hash
if data.key?(desired_key)
data[desired_key]
else
data.each do |key, val|
if found = deep_find_value_with_key(val, desired_key)
return found
end
end
end
end
return nil
end
The general idea is that given a data structure, you check it for the key (if it's a hash) and return the matching value if found. Otherwise, you iterate it (if it's an Array or Hash) and perform the same check on each of it's children.
This will find the value for the first occurrence of the given key, or nil if the key doesn't exist in the tree. If you need to find all instances then it's slightly different - you basically need to pass an array that will accumulate the values:
def deep_find_value_with_key(data, desired_key, hits = [])
case data
when Array
data.each do |value|
deep_find_value_with_key value, desired_key, hits
end
when Hash
if data.key?(desired_key)
hits << data[desired_key]
else
data.each do |key, val|
deep_find_value_with_key(val, desired_key)
end
end
end
return hits
end
irb> pp config
[{"file"=>"/var/tmp"},
{"size"=>"1024"},
{"modified"=>"03/28/2012"}]
=> nil
In the code,
config.each do |d|
# then how to break d into (k, v)???
end
config.each do |items|
items.each do |key, value|
# e.g. key="file", value="/var/tmp", etc.
end
end
Just do
config.each do |hash|
(k,v),_ = *hash
end
Inspired by #Arup's answer, here's a solution that doesn't require a extra, unused variable in the parallel assignment:
config.each do |hash|
key, value = hash.to_a[0]
end
to_a converts the hash into the same kind of array that you would get by using splat *hash, but you can actually index the first element of the array (i.e. the first key/value pair) with [0] this way, while trying to do so with splat (*hash) generates a syntax error (at least in Ruby version 2.1.1):
>> k,v = (*hash)[0]
SyntaxError: (irb):4: syntax error, unexpected ')', expecting '='
k,v = (*x)[0]
^
from c:/RailsInstaller/Ruby1.9.3/bin/irb:12:in `<main>'
>>
Of course, depending on what you're going to do with the key and value variables, it might make your code shorter and more readable to use one of these standard block constructs:
config.each do |hash|
hash.each { |key,value| puts "#{key}: #{value}" }
end
# or
config.each do |hash|
hash.each do |key,value|
puts "#{key}: #{value}"
end
end
Right now I have a double hash called data like the following:
data [name][action]
ie
data = {"Mike" => {"Walked" => 13, "Ran" => 5}, "Steve" => {...}}
For this particular hash, I don't actually know the keys in the hash, I just want to iterate over it, like so:
data.each |item| do
#how to get the key name for item here?
puts item["Walked"].to_s
puts item["Ran"].to_s
end
I'd like to get the key so I can display it in a table beside the values.
You can iterate over a hash using:
data.each do |key, value|
end
You can use each with a key, value syntax, as described in the each documentation:
data.each do |key, values|
puts key.to_s
values.each do |value|
value.to_s
end
end
You could also use keys or values depending on what you wanted to achieve.
data.keys.each do |key|
puts key #lists all keys
end
data.values.each do |value|
puts value #lists all values
end
data.keys.first #first key
and so on.