Module: Enumerable
Relationships & Source Files | |
Extension / Inclusion / Inheritance Descendants | |
Extended In:
| |
Included In:
| |
Defined in: | enum.c, enumerator.c |
Overview
The Enumerable
mixin provides collection classes with several traversal and searching methods, and with the ability to sort. The class must provide a method each
, which yields successive members of the collection. If #max, #min, or #sort is used, the objects in the collection must also implement a meaningful <=>
operator, as these methods rely on an ordering between members of the collection.
Instance Attribute Summary
-
#all? {|obj| ... } ⇒ Boolean
readonly
Passes each element of the collection to the given block.
-
#any? {|obj| ... } ⇒ Boolean
readonly
Passes each element of the collection to the given block.
-
#none? {|obj| ... } ⇒ Boolean
readonly
Passes each element of the collection to the given block.
-
#one? {|obj| ... } ⇒ Boolean
readonly
Passes each element of the collection to the given block.
Instance Method Summary
-
#chunk {|elt| ... } ⇒ Enumerator
Enumerates over the items, chunking them together based on the return value of the block.
-
#collect {|obj| ... } ⇒ Array
Alias for #map.
-
#collect_concat {|obj| ... } ⇒ Array
Alias for #flat_map.
-
#count ⇒ Integer
Returns the number of items in
enum
through enumeration. -
#cycle(n = nil) {|obj| ... } ⇒ nil
Calls block for each element of enum repeatedly n times or forever if none or
nil
is given. -
#detect(ifnone = nil) {|obj| ... } ⇒ Object?
Alias for #find.
-
#drop(n) ⇒ Array
Drops first n elements from enum, and returns rest elements in an array.
-
#drop_while {|arr| ... } ⇒ Array
Drops elements up to, but not including, the first element for which the block returns
nil
orfalse
and returns an array containing the remaining elements. -
#each_cons(n) ⇒ nil
Iterates the given block for each array of consecutive <n> elements.
-
#each_entry {|obj| ... } ⇒ Enumerator
Calls block once for each element in
self
, passing that element as a parameter, converting multiple values from yield to an array. -
#each_slice(n) ⇒ nil
Iterates the given block for each slice of <n> elements.
-
#each_with_index(*args) {|obj, i| ... } ⇒ Enumerator
Calls block with two arguments, the item and its index, for each item in enum.
-
#each_with_object(obj) {|(*args), memo_obj| ... } ⇒ Object
Iterates the given block for each element with an arbitrary object given, and returns the initially given object.
-
#entries(*args) ⇒ Array
Alias for #to_a.
-
#find(ifnone = nil) {|obj| ... } ⇒ Object?
(also: #detect)
Passes each entry in enum to block.
-
#find_all {|obj| ... } ⇒ Array
Alias for #select.
-
#find_index(value) ⇒ Integer?
Compares each entry in enum with value or passes to block.
-
#first ⇒ Object?
Returns the first element, or the first
n
elements, of the enumerable. -
#flat_map {|obj| ... } ⇒ Array
(also: #collect_concat)
Returns a new array with the concatenated results of running block once for every element in enum.
-
#grep(pattern) ⇒ Array
Returns an array of every element in enum for which
Pattern === element
. -
#group_by {|obj| ... } ⇒ Hash
Groups the collection by result of the block.
-
#include?(obj) ⇒ Boolean
Alias for #member?.
-
#inject(initial, sym) ⇒ Object
(also: #reduce)
Combines all elements of enum by applying a binary operation, specified by a block or a symbol that names a method or operator.
-
#lazy ⇒ lazy_enumerator
Returns a lazy enumerator, whose methods map/collect, flat_map/collect_concat, select/find_all, reject, grep, zip, take, take_while, drop, and drop_while enumerate values only on an as-needed basis.
-
#map {|obj| ... } ⇒ Array
(also: #collect)
Returns a new array with the results of running block once for every element in enum.
-
#max ⇒ Object
Returns the object in enum with the maximum value.
-
#max_by {|obj| ... } ⇒ Object
Returns the object in enum that gives the maximum value from the given block.
-
#member?(obj) ⇒ Boolean
(also: #include?)
Returns
true
if any member of enum equals obj. -
#min ⇒ Object
Returns the object in enum with the minimum value.
-
#min_by {|obj| ... } ⇒ Object
Returns the object in enum that gives the minimum value from the given block.
-
#minmax ⇒ Array, max
Returns two elements array which contains the minimum and the maximum value in the enumerable.
-
#minmax_by {|obj| ... } ⇒ Array, max
Returns a two element array containing the objects in enum that correspond to the minimum and maximum values respectively from the given block.
-
#partition {|obj| ... } ⇒ Array, false_array
Returns two arrays, the first containing the elements of enum for which the block evaluates to true, the second containing the rest.
-
#reduce(initial, sym) ⇒ Object
Alias for #inject.
-
#reject {|obj| ... } ⇒ Array
Returns an array for all elements of
enum
for which the givenblock
returns false. -
#reverse_each(*args) {|item| ... } ⇒ Enumerator
Builds a temporary array and traverses that array in reverse order.
-
#select {|obj| ... } ⇒ Array
(also: #find_all)
Returns an array containing all elements of
enum
for which the givenblock
returns a true value. -
#slice_after(pattern) ⇒ Enumerator
Creates an enumerator for each chunked elements.
-
#slice_before(pattern) ⇒ Enumerator
Creates an enumerator for each chunked elements.
-
#slice_when {|elt_before, elt_after| ... } ⇒ Enumerator
Creates an enumerator for each chunked elements.
-
#sort ⇒ Array
Returns an array containing the items in enum sorted, either according to their own
<=>
method, or by using the results of the supplied block. -
#sort_by {|obj| ... } ⇒ Array
Sorts enum using a set of keys generated by mapping the values in enum through the given block.
-
#take(n) ⇒ Array
Returns first n elements from enum.
-
#take_while {|arr| ... } ⇒ Array
Passes elements to the block until the block returns
nil
orfalse
, then stops iterating and returns an array of all prior elements. -
#to_a(*args) ⇒ Array
(also: #entries)
Returns an array containing the items in enum.
-
#to_h(*args) ⇒ Hash
Returns the result of interpreting enum as a list of
[key, value]
pairs. -
#zip(arg, ...) ⇒ an_array_of_array
Takes one element from enum and merges corresponding elements from each args.
Instance Attribute Details
#all? {|obj| ... } ⇒ Boolean
(readonly)
#all? ⇒ Boolean
Boolean
(readonly)
#all? ⇒ Boolean
Passes each element of the collection to the given block. The method returns true
if the block never returns false
or nil
. If the block is not given, Ruby adds an implicit block of { |obj| obj }
which will cause #all?
to return true
when none of the collection members are false
or nil
.
%w[ant bear cat].all? { |word| word.length >= 3 } #=> true
%w[ant bear cat].all? { |word| word.length >= 4 } #=> false
[nil, true, 99].all? #=> false
#any? {|obj| ... } ⇒ Boolean
(readonly)
#any? ⇒ Boolean
Boolean
(readonly)
#any? ⇒ Boolean
Passes each element of the collection to the given block. The method returns true
if the block ever returns a value other than false
or nil
. If the block is not given, Ruby adds an implicit block of { |obj| obj }
that will cause #any?
to return true
if at least one of the collection members is not false
or nil
.
%w[ant bear cat].any? { |word| word.length >= 3 } #=> true
%w[ant bear cat].any? { |word| word.length >= 4 } #=> true
[nil, true, 99].any? #=> true
#none? {|obj| ... } ⇒ Boolean
(readonly)
#none? ⇒ Boolean
Boolean
(readonly)
#none? ⇒ Boolean
Passes each element of the collection to the given block. The method returns true
if the block never returns true
for all elements. If the block is not given, none?
will return true
only if none of the collection members is true.
%w{ant bear cat}.none? { |word| word.length == 5 } #=> true
%w{ant bear cat}.none? { |word| word.length >= 4 } #=> false
[].none? #=> true
[nil].none? #=> true
[nil, false].none? #=> true
#one? {|obj| ... } ⇒ Boolean
(readonly)
#one? ⇒ Boolean
Boolean
(readonly)
#one? ⇒ Boolean
Passes each element of the collection to the given block. The method returns true
if the block returns true
exactly once. If the block is not given, one?
will return true
only if exactly one of the collection members is true.
%w{ant bear cat}.one? { |word| word.length == 4 } #=> true
%w{ant bear cat}.one? { |word| word.length > 4 } #=> false
%w{ant bear cat}.one? { |word| word.length < 4 } #=> false
[ nil, true, 99 ].one? #=> false
[ nil, true, false ].one? #=> true
Instance Method Details
#chunk {|elt| ... } ⇒ Enumerator
#chunk(initial_state) {|elt, state| ... } ⇒ an_enumerator
(deprecated
)
an_enumerator
(deprecated
)
Enumerates over the items, chunking them together based on the return value of the block.
Consecutive elements which return the same block value are chunked together.
For example, consecutive even numbers and odd numbers can be chunked as follows.
[3, 1, 4, 1, 5, 9, 2, 6, 5, 3, 5].chunk { |n|
n.even?
}.each { |even, ary|
p [even, ary]
}
#=> [false, [3, 1]]
# [true, [4]]
# [false, [1, 5, 9]]
# [true, [2, 6]]
# [false, [5, 3, 5]]
This method is especially useful for sorted series of elements. The following example counts words for each initial letter.
open("/usr/share/dict/words", "r:iso-8859-1") { |f|
f.chunk { |line| line.ord }.each { |ch, lines| p [ch.chr, lines.length] }
}
#=> ["\n", 1]
# ["A", 1327]
# ["B", 1372]
# ["C", 1507]
# ["D", 791]
# ...
The following key values have special meaning:
-
nil
and:_separator
specifies that the elements should be dropped. -
:_alone
specifies that the element should be chunked by itself.
Any other symbols that begin with an underscore will raise an error:
items.chunk { |item| :_underscore }
#=> RuntimeError: symbols beginning with an underscore are reserved
nil
and :_separator
can be used to ignore some elements.
For example, the sequence of hyphens in svn log can be eliminated as follows:
sep = "-"*72 + "\n"
IO.popen("svn log README") { |f|
f.chunk { |line|
line != sep || nil
}.each { |_, lines|
pp lines
}
}
#=> ["r20018 | knu | 2008-10-29 13:20:42 +0900 (Wed, 29 Oct 2008) | 2 lines\n",
# "\n",
# "* README, README.ja: Update the portability section.\n",
# "\n"]
# ["r16725 | knu | 2008-05-31 23:34:23 +0900 (Sat, 31 May 2008) | 2 lines\n",
# "\n",
# "* README, README.ja: Add a note about default C flags.\n",
# "\n"]
# ...
Paragraphs separated by empty lines can be parsed as follows:
File.foreach("README").chunk { |line|
/\A\s*\z/ !~ line || nil
}.each { |_, lines|
pp lines
}
:_alone
can be used to force items into their own chunk. For example, you can put lines that contain a URL by themselves, and chunk the rest of the lines together, like this:
pattern = /http/
open(filename) { |f|
f.chunk { |line| line =~ pattern ? :_alone : true }.each { |key, lines|
pp lines
}
}
Alias for #map.
#flat_map {|obj| ... } ⇒ Array
#collect_concat {|obj| ... } ⇒ Array
#flat_map ⇒ Enumerator
#collect_concat ⇒ Enumerator
Alias for #flat_map.
Returns the number of items in enum
through enumeration. If an argument is given, the number of items in enum
that are equal to item
are counted. If a block is given, it counts the number of elements yielding a true value.
ary = [1, 2, 4, 2]
ary.count #=> 4
ary.count(2) #=> 2
ary.count{ |x| x%2==0 } #=> 3
#cycle(n = nil) {|obj| ... } ⇒ nil
#cycle(n = nil) ⇒ Enumerator
nil
#cycle(n = nil) ⇒ Enumerator
Calls block for each element of enum repeatedly n times or forever if none or nil
is given. If a non-positive number is given or the collection is empty, does nothing. Returns nil
if the loop has finished without getting interrupted.
cycle
saves elements in an internal array so changes to enum after the first pass have no effect.
If no block is given, an enumerator is returned instead.
a = ["a", "b", "c"]
a.cycle { |x| puts x } # print, a, b, c, a, b, c,.. forever.
a.cycle(2) { |x| puts x } # print, a, b, c, a, b, c.
#detect(ifnone = nil) {|obj| ... } ⇒ Object?
#find(ifnone = nil) {|obj| ... } ⇒ Object?
#detect(ifnone = nil) ⇒ Enumerator
#find(ifnone = nil) ⇒ Enumerator
Alias for #find.
#drop(n) ⇒ Array
Drops first n elements from enum, and returns rest elements in an array.
a = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 0]
a.drop(3) #=> [4, 5, 0]
#drop_while {|arr| ... } ⇒ Array
#drop_while ⇒ Enumerator
Drops elements up to, but not including, the first element for which the block returns nil
or false
and returns an array containing the remaining elements.
If no block is given, an enumerator is returned instead.
a = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 0]
a.drop_while { |i| i < 3 } #=> [3, 4, 5, 0]
#each_cons(n) ⇒ nil
#each_cons(n) ⇒ Enumerator
nil
#each_cons(n) ⇒ Enumerator
Iterates the given block for each array of consecutive <n> elements. If no block is given, returns an enumerator.
e.g.:
(1..10).each_cons(3) { |a| p a }
# outputs below
[1, 2, 3]
[2, 3, 4]
[3, 4, 5]
[4, 5, 6]
[5, 6, 7]
[6, 7, 8]
[7, 8, 9]
[8, 9, 10]
#each_entry {|obj| ... } ⇒ Enumerator
#each_entry ⇒ Enumerator
Calls block once for each element in self
, passing that element as a parameter, converting multiple values from yield to an array.
If no block is given, an enumerator is returned instead.
class Foo
include Enumerable
def each
yield 1
yield 1, 2
yield
end
end
Foo.new.each_entry{ |o| p o }
produces:
1
[1, 2]
nil
#each_slice(n) ⇒ nil
#each_slice(n) ⇒ Enumerator
nil
#each_slice(n) ⇒ Enumerator
Iterates the given block for each slice of <n> elements. If no block is given, returns an enumerator.
(1..10).each_slice(3) { |a| p a }
# outputs below
[1, 2, 3]
[4, 5, 6]
[7, 8, 9]
[10]
#each_with_index(*args) {|obj, i| ... } ⇒ Enumerator
#each_with_index(*args) ⇒ Enumerator
Calls block with two arguments, the item and its index, for each item in enum. Given arguments are passed through to #each().
If no block is given, an enumerator is returned instead.
hash = Hash.new
%w(cat dog wombat).each_with_index { |item, index|
hash[item] = index
}
hash #=> {"cat"=>0, "dog"=>1, "wombat"=>2}
#each_with_object(obj) {|(*args), memo_obj| ... } ⇒ Object
#each_with_object(obj) ⇒ Enumerator
Iterates the given block for each element with an arbitrary object given, and returns the initially given object.
If no block is given, returns an enumerator.
evens = (1..10).each_with_object([]) { |i, a| a << i*2 }
#=> [2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14, 16, 18, 20]
Alias for #to_a.
#detect(ifnone = nil) {|obj| ... } ⇒ Object?
#find(ifnone = nil) {|obj| ... } ⇒ Object?
#detect(ifnone = nil) ⇒ Enumerator
#find(ifnone = nil) ⇒ Enumerator
Also known as: #detect
Passes each entry in enum to block. Returns the first for which block is not false. If no object matches, calls ifnone and returns its result when it is specified, or returns nil
otherwise.
If no block is given, an enumerator is returned instead.
(1..10).detect { |i| i % 5 == 0 and i % 7 == 0 } #=> nil
(1..100).find { |i| i % 5 == 0 and i % 7 == 0 } #=> 35
#find_all {|obj| ... } ⇒ Array
#select {|obj| ... } ⇒ Array
#find_all ⇒ Enumerator
#select ⇒ Enumerator
Alias for #select.
Compares each entry in enum with value or passes to block. Returns the index for the first for which the evaluated value is non-false. If no object matches, returns nil
If neither block nor argument is given, an enumerator is returned instead.
(1..10).find_index { |i| i % 5 == 0 and i % 7 == 0 } #=> nil
(1..100).find_index { |i| i % 5 == 0 and i % 7 == 0 } #=> 34
(1..100).find_index(50) #=> 49
Returns the first element, or the first n
elements, of the enumerable. If the enumerable is empty, the first form returns nil
, and the second form returns an empty array.
%w[foo bar baz].first #=> "foo"
%w[foo bar baz].first(2) #=> ["foo", "bar"]
%w[foo bar baz].first(10) #=> ["foo", "bar", "baz"]
[].first #=> nil
#flat_map {|obj| ... } ⇒ Array
#collect_concat {|obj| ... } ⇒ Array
#flat_map ⇒ Enumerator
#collect_concat ⇒ Enumerator
Also known as: #collect_concat
Returns a new array with the concatenated results of running block once for every element in enum.
If no block is given, an enumerator is returned instead.
[1, 2, 3, 4].flat_map { |e| [e, -e] } #=> [1, -1, 2, -2, 3, -3, 4, -4]
[[1, 2], [3, 4]].flat_map { |e| e + [100] } #=> [1, 2, 100, 3, 4, 100]
Returns an array of every element in enum for which Pattern === element
. If the optional block is supplied, each matching element is passed to it, and the block's result is stored in the output array.
(1..100).grep 38..44 #=> [38, 39, 40, 41, 42, 43, 44]
c = IO.constants
c.grep(/SEEK/) #=> [:SEEK_SET, :SEEK_CUR, :SEEK_END]
res = c.grep(/SEEK/) { |v| IO.const_get(v) }
res #=> [0, 1, 2]
#group_by {|obj| ... } ⇒ Hash
#group_by ⇒ Enumerator
Groups the collection by result of the block. Returns a hash where the keys are the evaluated result from the block and the values are arrays of elements in the collection that correspond to the key.
If no block is given an enumerator is returned.
(1..6).group_by { |i| i%3 } #=> {0=>[3, 6], 1=>[1, 4], 2=>[2, 5]}
#include?(obj) ⇒ Boolean
#member?(obj) ⇒ Boolean
Boolean
#member?(obj) ⇒ Boolean
Alias for #member?.
#inject(initial, sym) ⇒ Object
#inject(sym) ⇒ Object
#inject(initial) {|memo, obj| ... } ⇒ Object
#inject {|memo, obj| ... } ⇒ Object
#reduce(initial, sym) ⇒ Object
#reduce(sym) ⇒ Object
#reduce(initial) {|memo, obj| ... } ⇒ Object
#reduce {|memo, obj| ... } ⇒ Object
Also known as: #reduce
Combines all elements of enum by applying a binary operation, specified by a block or a symbol that names a method or operator.
If you specify a block, then for each element in enum the block is passed an accumulator value (memo) and the element. If you specify a symbol instead, then each element in the collection will be passed to the named method of memo. In either case, the result becomes the new value for memo. At the end of the iteration, the final value of memo is the return value for the method.
If you do not explicitly specify an initial value for memo, then the first element of collection is used as the initial value of memo.
# Sum some numbers
(5..10).reduce(:+) #=> 45
# Same using a block and inject
(5..10).inject { |sum, n| sum + n } #=> 45
# Multiply some numbers
(5..10).reduce(1, :*) #=> 151200
# Same using a block
(5..10).inject(1) { |product, n| product * n } #=> 151200
# find the longest word
longest = %w{ cat sheep bear }.inject do |memo, word|
memo.length > word.length ? memo : word
end
longest #=> "sheep"
#lazy ⇒ lazy_enumerator
Returns a lazy enumerator, whose methods map/collect, flat_map/collect_concat, select/find_all, reject, grep, zip, take, take_while, drop, and drop_while enumerate values only on an as-needed basis. However, if a block is given to zip, values are enumerated immediately.
Example
The following program finds pythagorean triples:
def pythagorean_triples
(1..Float::INFINITY).lazy.flat_map {|z|
(1..z).flat_map {|x|
(x..z).select {|y|
x**2 + y**2 == z**2
}.map {|y|
[x, y, z]
}
}
}
end
# show first ten pythagorean triples
p pythagorean_triples.take(10).force # take is lazy, so force is needed
p pythagorean_triples.first(10) # first is eager
# show pythagorean triples less than 100
p pythagorean_triples.take_while { |*, z| z < 100 }.force
Also known as: #collect
Returns a new array with the results of running block once for every element in enum.
If no block is given, an enumerator is returned instead.
(1..4).map { |i| i*i } #=> [1, 4, 9, 16]
(1..4).collect { "cat" } #=> ["cat", "cat", "cat", "cat"]
Returns the object in enum with the maximum value. The first form assumes all objects implement ::Comparable; the second uses the block to return a <=> b.
a = %w(albatross dog horse)
a.max #=> "horse"
a.max { |a, b| a.length <=> b.length } #=> "albatross"
If the n
argument is given, maximum n
elements are returned as an array, sorted in descending order.
a = %w[albatross dog horse]
a.max(2) #=> ["horse", "dog"]
a.max(2) {|a, b| a.length <=> b.length } #=> ["albatross", "horse"]
[5, 1, 3, 4, 2].max(3) #=> [5, 4, 3]
#max_by {|obj| ... } ⇒ Object
#max_by ⇒ Enumerator
#max_by(n) {|obj| ... } ⇒ Object
#max_by(n) ⇒ Enumerator
Returns the object in enum that gives the maximum value from the given block.
If no block is given, an enumerator is returned instead.
a = %w(albatross dog horse)
a.max_by { |x| x.length } #=> "albatross"
If the n
argument is given, maximum n
elements are returned as an array. These n
elements are sorted by the value from the given block, in descending order.
a = %w[albatross dog horse]
a.max_by(2) {|x| x.length } #=> ["albatross", "horse"]
enum.max_by(n) can be used to implement weighted random sampling. Following example implements and use Enumerable#wsample
.
module Enumerable
# weighted random sampling.
#
# Pavlos S. Efraimidis, Paul G. Spirakis
# Weighted random sampling with a reservoir
# Information Processing Letters
# Volume 97, Issue 5 (16 March 2006)
def wsample(n)
self.max_by(n) {|v| rand ** (1.0/yield(v)) }
end
end
e = (-20..20).to_a*10000
a = e.wsample(20000) {|x|
Math.exp(-(x/5.0)**2) # normal distribution
}
# a is 20000 samples from e.
p a.length #=> 20000
h = a.group_by {|x| x }
-10.upto(10) {|x| puts "*" * (h[x].length/30.0).to_i if h[x] }
#=> *
# ***
# ******
# ***********
# ******************
# *****************************
# *****************************************
# ****************************************************
# ***************************************************************
# ********************************************************************
# ***********************************************************************
# ***********************************************************************
# **************************************************************
# ****************************************************
# ***************************************
# ***************************
# ******************
# ***********
# *******
# ***
# *
#include?(obj) ⇒ Boolean
#member?(obj) ⇒ Boolean
Also known as: #include?
Boolean
#member?(obj) ⇒ Boolean
Returns the object in enum with the minimum value. The first form assumes all objects implement ::Comparable; the second uses the block to return a <=> b.
a = %w(albatross dog horse)
a.min #=> "albatross"
a.min { |a, b| a.length <=> b.length } #=> "dog"
If the n
argument is given, minimum n
elements are returned as a sorted array.
a = %w[albatross dog horse]
a.min(2) #=> ["albatross", "dog"]
a.min(2) {|a, b| a.length <=> b.length } #=> ["dog", "horse"]
[5, 1, 3, 4, 2].min(3) #=> [1, 2, 3]
#min_by {|obj| ... } ⇒ Object
#min_by ⇒ Enumerator
#min_by(n) {|obj| ... } ⇒ Array
#min_by(n) ⇒ Enumerator
Returns the object in enum that gives the minimum value from the given block.
If no block is given, an enumerator is returned instead.
a = %w(albatross dog horse)
a.min_by { |x| x.length } #=> "dog"
If the n
argument is given, minimum n
elements are returned as an array. These n
elements are sorted by the value from the given block.
a = %w[albatross dog horse]
p a.min_by(2) {|x| x.length } #=> ["dog", "horse"]
Returns two elements array which contains the minimum and the maximum value in the enumerable. The first form assumes all objects implement ::Comparable; the second uses the block to return a <=> b.
a = %w(albatross dog horse)
a.minmax #=> ["albatross", "horse"]
a.minmax { |a, b| a.length <=> b.length } #=> ["dog", "albatross"]
#minmax_by {|obj| ... } ⇒ Array, max
#minmax_by ⇒ Enumerator
Returns a two element array containing the objects in enum that correspond to the minimum and maximum values respectively from the given block.
If no block is given, an enumerator is returned instead.
a = %w(albatross dog horse)
a.minmax_by { |x| x.length } #=> ["dog", "albatross"]
#partition {|obj| ... } ⇒ Array, false_array
#partition ⇒ Enumerator
false_array
#partition ⇒ Enumerator
Returns two arrays, the first containing the elements of enum for which the block evaluates to true, the second containing the rest.
If no block is given, an enumerator is returned instead.
(1..6).partition { |v| v.even? } #=> [[2, 4, 6], [1, 3, 5]]
Alias for #inject.
#reject {|obj| ... } ⇒ Array
#reject ⇒ Enumerator
Returns an array for all elements of enum
for which the given block
returns false.
If no block is given, an ::Enumerator is returned instead.
(1..10).reject { |i| i % 3 == 0 } #=> [1, 2, 4, 5, 7, 8, 10]
[1, 2, 3, 4, 5].reject { |num| num.even? } #=> [1, 3, 5]
See also #find_all.
#reverse_each(*args) {|item| ... } ⇒ Enumerator
#reverse_each(*args) ⇒ Enumerator
Builds a temporary array and traverses that array in reverse order.
If no block is given, an enumerator is returned instead.
(1..3).reverse_each { |v| p v }
produces:
3
2
1
#find_all {|obj| ... } ⇒ Array
#select {|obj| ... } ⇒ Array
#find_all ⇒ Enumerator
#select ⇒ Enumerator
Also known as: #find_all
Returns an array containing all elements of enum
for which the given block
returns a true value.
If no block is given, an ::Enumerator is returned instead.
(1..10).find_all { |i| i % 3 == 0 } #=> [3, 6, 9]
[1,2,3,4,5].select { |num| num.even? } #=> [2, 4]
See also #reject.
#slice_after(pattern) ⇒ Enumerator
#slice_after {|elt| ... } ⇒ Enumerator
Creates an enumerator for each chunked elements. The ends of chunks are defined by pattern and the block.
If pattern === elt
returns true
or the block returns true
for the element, the element is end of a chunk.
The ===
and block is called from the first element to the last element of enum.
The result enumerator yields the chunked elements as an array. So each
method can be called as follows:
enum.slice_after(pattern).each { |ary| ... }
enum.slice_after { |elt| bool }.each { |ary| ... }
Other methods of the ::Enumerator class and Enumerable
module, such as #map, etc., are also usable.
For example, continuation lines (lines end with backslash) can be concatenated as follows:
lines = ["foo\n", "bar\\\n", "baz\n", "\n", "qux\n"]
e = lines.slice_after(/(?<!\\)\n\z/)
p e.to_a
#=> [["foo\n"], ["bar\\\n", "baz\n"], ["\n"], ["qux\n"]]
p e.map {|ll| ll[0...-1].map {|l| l.sub(/\\\n\z/, "") }.join + ll.last }
#=>["foo\n", "barbaz\n", "\n", "qux\n"]
#slice_before(pattern) ⇒ Enumerator
#slice_before {|elt| ... } ⇒ Enumerator
#slice_before(initial_state) {|elt, state| ... } ⇒ an_enumerator
(deprecated
)
an_enumerator
(deprecated
)
Creates an enumerator for each chunked elements. The beginnings of chunks are defined by pattern and the block.
If pattern === elt
returns true
or the block returns true
for the element, the element is beginning of a chunk.
The ===
and block is called from the first element to the last element of enum. The result for the first element is ignored.
The result enumerator yields the chunked elements as an array. So each
method can be called as follows:
enum.slice_before(pattern).each { |ary| ... }
enum.slice_before { |elt| bool }.each { |ary| ... }
Other methods of the ::Enumerator class and Enumerable
module, such as map, etc., are also usable.
For example, iteration over ChangeLog entries can be implemented as follows:
# iterate over ChangeLog entries.
open("ChangeLog") { |f|
f.slice_before(/\A\S/).each { |e| pp e }
}
# same as above. block is used instead of pattern argument.
open("ChangeLog") { |f|
f.slice_before { |line| /\A\S/ === line }.each { |e| pp e }
}
“svn proplist -R” produces multiline output for each file. They can be chunked as follows:
IO.popen([{"LC_ALL"=>"C"}, "svn", "proplist", "-R"]) { |f|
f.lines.slice_before(/\AProp/).each { |lines| p lines }
}
#=> ["Properties on '.':\n", " svn:ignore\n", " svk:merge\n"]
# ["Properties on 'goruby.c':\n", " svn:eol-style\n"]
# ["Properties on 'complex.c':\n", " svn:mime-type\n", " svn:eol-style\n"]
# ["Properties on 'regparse.c':\n", " svn:eol-style\n"]
# ...
If the block needs to maintain state over multiple elements, local variables can be used. For example, three or more consecutive increasing numbers can be squashed as follows:
a = [0, 2, 3, 4, 6, 7, 9]
prev = a[0]
p a.slice_before { |e|
prev, prev2 = e, prev
prev2 + 1 != e
}.map { |es|
es.length <= 2 ? es.join(",") : "#{es.first}-#{es.last}"
}.join(",")
#=> "0,2-4,6,7,9"
However local variables should be used carefully if the result enumerator is enumerated twice or more. The local variables should be initialized for each enumeration. Enumerator.new can be used to do it.
# Word wrapping. This assumes all characters have same width.
def wordwrap(words, maxwidth)
Enumerator.new {|y|
# cols is initialized in Enumerator.new.
cols = 0
words.slice_before { |w|
cols += 1 if cols != 0
cols += w.length
if maxwidth < cols
cols = w.length
true
else
false
end
}.each {|ws| y.yield ws }
}
end
text = (1..20).to_a.join(" ")
enum = wordwrap(text.split(/\s+/), 10)
puts "-"*10
enum.each { |ws| puts ws.join(" ") } # first enumeration.
puts "-"*10
enum.each { |ws| puts ws.join(" ") } # second enumeration generates same result as the first.
puts "-"*10
#=> ----------
# 1 2 3 4 5
# 6 7 8 9 10
# 11 12 13
# 14 15 16
# 17 18 19
# 20
# ----------
# 1 2 3 4 5
# 6 7 8 9 10
# 11 12 13
# 14 15 16
# 17 18 19
# 20
# ----------
mbox contains series of mails which start with Unix From line. So each mail can be extracted by slice before Unix From line.
# parse mbox
open("mbox") { |f|
f.slice_before { |line|
line.start_with? "From "
}.each { |mail|
unix_from = mail.shift
i = mail.index("\n")
header = mail[0...i]
body = mail[(i+1)..-1]
body.pop if body.last == "\n"
fields = header.slice_before { |line| !" \t".include?(line[0]) }.to_a
p unix_from
pp fields
pp body
}
}
# split mails in mbox (slice before Unix From line after an empty line)
open("mbox") { |f|
f.slice_before(emp: true) { |line, h|
prevemp = h[:emp]
h[:emp] = line == "\n"
prevemp && line.start_with?("From ")
}.each { |mail|
mail.pop if mail.last == "\n"
pp mail
}
}
#slice_when {|elt_before, elt_after| ... } ⇒ Enumerator
Creates an enumerator for each chunked elements. The beginnings of chunks are defined by the block.
This method split each chunk using adjacent elements, elt_before and elt_after, in the receiver enumerator. This method split chunks between elt_before and elt_after where the block returns true.
The block is called the length of the receiver enumerator minus one.
The result enumerator yields the chunked elements as an array. So each
method can be called as follows:
enum.slice_when { |elt_before, elt_after| bool }.each { |ary| ... }
Other methods of the ::Enumerator class and Enumerable
module, such as #to_a, #map, etc., are also usable.
For example, one-by-one increasing subsequence can be chunked as follows:
a = [1,2,4,9,10,11,12,15,16,19,20,21]
b = a.slice_when {|i, j| i+1 != j }
p b.to_a #=> [[1, 2], [4], [9, 10, 11, 12], [15, 16], [19, 20, 21]]
c = b.map {|a| a.length < 3 ? a : "#{a.first}-#{a.last}" }
p c #=> [[1, 2], [4], "9-12", [15, 16], "19-21"]
d = c.join(",")
p d #=> "1,2,4,9-12,15,16,19-21"
Near elements (threshold: 6) in sorted array can be chunked as follwos:
a = [3, 11, 14, 25, 28, 29, 29, 41, 55, 57]
p a.slice_when {|i, j| 6 < j - i }.to_a
#=> [[3], [11, 14], [25, 28, 29, 29], [41], [55, 57]]
Increasing (non-decreasing) subsequence can be chunked as follows:
a = [0, 9, 2, 2, 3, 2, 7, 5, 9, 5]
p a.slice_when {|i, j| i > j }.to_a
#=> [[0, 9], [2, 2, 3], [2, 7], [5, 9], [5]]
Adjacent evens and odds can be chunked as follows: (Enumerable#chunk is another way to do it.)
a = [7, 5, 9, 2, 0, 7, 9, 4, 2, 0]
p a.slice_when {|i, j| i.even? != j.even? }.to_a
#=> [[7, 5, 9], [2, 0], [7, 9], [4, 2, 0]]
Paragraphs (non-empty lines with trailing empty lines) can be chunked as follows: (See #chunk to ignore empty lines.)
lines = ["foo\n", "bar\n", "\n", "baz\n", "qux\n"]
p lines.slice_when {|l1, l2| /\A\s*\z/ =~ l1 && /\S/ =~ l2 }.to_a
#=> [["foo\n", "bar\n", "\n"], ["baz\n", "qux\n"]]
Returns an array containing the items in enum sorted, either according to their own <=>
method, or by using the results of the supplied block. The block should return -1, 0, or +1 depending on the comparison between a and b. As of Ruby 1.8, the method #sort_by implements a built-in Schwartzian Transform, useful when key computation or comparison is expensive.
%w(rhea kea flea).sort #=> ["flea", "kea", "rhea"]
(1..10).sort { |a, b| b <=> a } #=> [10, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1]
#sort_by {|obj| ... } ⇒ Array
#sort_by ⇒ Enumerator
Sorts enum using a set of keys generated by mapping the values in enum through the given block.
If no block is given, an enumerator is returned instead.
%w{apple pear fig}.sort_by { |word| word.length}
#=> ["fig", "pear", "apple"]
The current implementation of sort_by
generates an array of tuples containing the original collection element and the mapped value. This makes sort_by
fairly expensive when the keysets are simple.
require 'benchmark'
a = (1..100000).map { rand(100000) }
Benchmark.bm(10) do |b|
b.report("Sort") { a.sort }
b.report("Sort by") { a.sort_by { |a| a } }
end
produces:
user system total real
Sort 0.180000 0.000000 0.180000 ( 0.175469)
Sort by 1.980000 0.040000 2.020000 ( 2.013586)
However, consider the case where comparing the keys is a non-trivial operation. The following code sorts some files on modification time using the basic #sort method.
files = Dir["*"]
sorted = files.sort { |a, b| File.new(a).mtime <=> File.new(b).mtime }
sorted #=> ["mon", "tues", "wed", "thurs"]
This sort is inefficient: it generates two new ::File objects during every comparison. A slightly better technique is to use the Kernel#test
method to generate the modification times directly.
files = Dir["*"]
sorted = files.sort { |a, b|
test(?M, a) <=> test(?M, b)
}
sorted #=> ["mon", "tues", "wed", "thurs"]
This still generates many unnecessary ::Time objects. A more efficient technique is to cache the sort keys (modification times in this case) before the sort. Perl users often call this approach a Schwartzian Transform, after Randal Schwartz. We construct a temporary array, where each element is an array containing our sort key along with the filename. We sort this array, and then extract the filename from the result.
sorted = Dir["*"].collect { |f|
[test(?M, f), f]
}.sort.collect { |f| f[1] }
sorted #=> ["mon", "tues", "wed", "thurs"]
This is exactly what sort_by
does internally.
sorted = Dir["*"].sort_by { |f| test(?M, f) }
sorted #=> ["mon", "tues", "wed", "thurs"]
#take(n) ⇒ Array
Returns first n elements from enum.
a = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 0]
a.take(3) #=> [1, 2, 3]
a.take(30) #=> [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 0]
#take_while {|arr| ... } ⇒ Array
#take_while ⇒ Enumerator
Passes elements to the block until the block returns nil
or false
, then stops iterating and returns an array of all prior elements.
If no block is given, an enumerator is returned instead.
a = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 0]
a.take_while { |i| i < 3 } #=> [1, 2]
Also known as: #entries
Returns an array containing the items in enum.
(1..7).to_a #=> [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7]
{ 'a'=>1, 'b'=>2, 'c'=>3 }.to_a #=> [["a", 1], ["b", 2], ["c", 3]]
require 'prime'
Prime.entries 10 #=> [2, 3, 5, 7]
#to_h(*args) ⇒ Hash
Returns the result of interpreting enum as a list of [key, value]
pairs.
%i[hello world].each_with_index.to_h
# => {:hello => 0, :world => 1}
#zip(arg, ...) ⇒ an_array_of_array
#zip(arg, ...) {|arr| ... } ⇒ nil
an_array_of_array
#zip(arg, ...) {|arr| ... } ⇒ nil
Takes one element from enum and merges corresponding elements from each args. This generates a sequence of n-element arrays, where n is one more than the count of arguments. The length of the resulting sequence will be enum#size
. If the size of any argument is less than enum#size
, nil
values are supplied. If a block is given, it is invoked for each output array, otherwise an array of arrays is returned.
a = [ 4, 5, 6 ]
b = [ 7, 8, 9 ]
a.zip(b) #=> [[4, 7], [5, 8], [6, 9]]
[1, 2, 3].zip(a, b) #=> [[1, 4, 7], [2, 5, 8], [3, 6, 9]]
[1, 2].zip(a, b) #=> [[1, 4, 7], [2, 5, 8]]
a.zip([1, 2], [8]) #=> [[4, 1, 8], [5, 2, nil], [6, nil, nil]]