Feeding a codeblock/function with an array or something simi

Hi,
I have a codeblock like this:

def foobar(command,customerrormessage)
if not system(command)
puts customerrormessage
exit
end
end

and then many calls of it like:

foobar(‘rm something’,‘Error I could’nt remove something’)
foobar(‘apt-get install thishere’,‘Error while installing the packet’)
foobar(‘module-assistant a-i mymodule’,‘Error while installing the
module’)
[…]

In pascal I would simply create a multi-dimensional array[x,y] and fill
it with the commands and the corresponding error-messages but how to do
this in ruby? There are no arrays like the mentioned on or? Or do you
have a even better solution for this?

greets

On 9/4/07, kazaam [email protected] wrote:

and then many calls of it like:

foobar(‘rm something’,‘Error I could’nt remove something’)
foobar(‘apt-get install thishere’,‘Error while installing the packet’)
foobar(‘module-assistant a-i mymodule’,‘Error while installing the module’)

In pascal I would simply create a multi-dimensional array[x,y] and fill it with the
commands and the corresponding error-messages but how to do this in ruby?
There are no arrays like the mentioned on or? Or do you have a even better
solution for this?

I assume the order in which you execute the commands is important, so
I would do it like this (not tested):

command_list = []
command_list << {:command => ‘rm something’, :error_msg => ‘I couldn’t
remove something’}
command_list << {:command => ‘apt-get install thishere’, :error_msg =>
‘Error while installing the packet’}
command_list << {:command => ‘module-assistant a-i mymodule’,
:error_msg => ‘Error while installing the module’}

process_commands(command_list)

the process_commands can be something like:

def process_commands(command_list)
command_list.each do |command|
if not system(command[:command])
puts command[:error_msg]
end
end
end

Don’t know if you want to break the execution of the other commands if
something fails, in which case you can return from the method inside
the if, but this can get you started as an idea.

Jesus.

Hi thanks,
I would do this method to make my code smaller and better looking but
the whole:

command_list << {:command => ‘rm something’, :error_msg => ‘I couldn’t
remove something’}
command_list << {:command => ‘apt-get install thishere’, :error_msg =>
‘Error while installing the packet’}
command_list << {:command => ‘module-assistant a-i mymodule’,
:error_msg => ‘Error while installing the module’}

would blow the code even more than my momentan solution :slight_smile:

2007/9/4, kazaam [email protected]:

and then many calls of it like:

foobar(‘rm something’,‘Error I could’nt remove something’)
foobar(‘apt-get install thishere’,‘Error while installing the packet’)
foobar(‘module-assistant a-i mymodule’,‘Error while installing the module’)
[…]

In pascal I would simply create a multi-dimensional array[x,y] and fill it with the commands and the corresponding error-messages but how to do this in ruby? There are no arrays like the mentioned on or? Or do you have a even better solution for this?

You can create multidimensional array just the same:

[
[‘rm something’,‘Error I could’nt remove something’],
[‘apt-get install thishere’,‘Error while installing the packet’],
[‘module-assistant a-i mymodule’,‘Error while installing the module’],
].each do |cmd, error|
unless system cmd
$stderr.puts error
exit 1
end
end

Kind regards

robert

thank you this works nice :slight_smile:


kazaam [email protected]

On 9/4/07, kazaam [email protected] wrote:

would blow the code even more than my momentan solution :slight_smile:

It’s easy to read this from a YAML configuration file or from a DB, so
the actual list of commands is not hardcoded. It all depends on the
complexity of your application. Of course you can also use other
structures like a multidimensional array, or a unidimensional array
with [cmd1, msg1, cmd2, msg2…], but I like the hash cause it makes
clear what each element is. I’d rather not have arrays where you need
to know that the first element is something and the second is
something else, but for simple cases it might be enough. YMMV, though.

Jesus.