Monday, October 21, 2019
Using the Each Method in Ruby
Using the Each Method in Ruby Every array and hash in Ruby is an object, and every object of these types has a set of built-in methods. Programmers new to Ruby can learn about how to use the each method with an array and a hash by following the simple examples presented here. Using the Each Method With an Array Object in Ruby First,à create an array object by assigning the array to stooges. stooges [Larry, Curly, Moe] Next, call the each method and create a small block of code to process the results. stooges.each { |stooge| print stooge \n } This codeà produces the following output: Larry Curly Moe The each method takes two arguments- an element and a block. The element, contained within the pipes, is similar to a placeholder. Whatever you put inside the pipes is used in the block to represent each element of the array in turn. The block is the line of code that is executed on each of the array itemsà and is handed the element to process. You can easily extend the code block to multiple lines by using do to define a larger block: stuff.each do |thing| print thing print \n end This is the same as the first example, except that the block is defined as everything after the element (in pipes) and before the end statement. Using the Each Method With a Hash Object Just like theà array object, theà hash objectà has anà eachà method that can be used to apply a block of code on each item in the hash.à First, create a simpleà hash objectà that contains some contact information: contact_info { name Bob, phone 111-111-1111 } Then, call theà eachà method and create a single line block of code to process and print the results. contact_info.each { |key, value| print key value \n } This produces the following output: name Bob phone 111-111-1111 This works exactly like theà each methodà for anà array objectà with one crucial difference. For a hash, you createà twoà elements- one for theà hashà key and one for the value. Like the array, these elements are placeholders that are used to pass eachà key/valueà pair into the code block asà Ruby loopsà through the hash. You can easily extend the code block to multiple lines by usingà doà to define a larger block: contact_info.each do |key, value| print print key value print \nend This is the same as the first hash example, except that theà blockà is defined as everything after the elements (in pipes) and before theà endà statement.
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