NAME
map.rb
SYNOPSIS
the awesome ruby container you’ve always wanted: a string/symbol
indifferent
ordered hash that works in all rubies
maps are bitchin ordered hashes that are both ordered, string/symbol
indifferent, and have all sorts of sweetness like recursive
conversion,
more
robust implementation than HashWithIndifferentAccess, support for
struct
like (map.foo) access, and support for option/keyword access which
avoids
several nasty classes of errors in many ruby libraries
INSTALL
gem install map
URI
http://github.com/ahoward/map
DESCRIPTION
maps are always ordered. constructing them in an ordered fashion
builds
them that way, although the normal hash contructor is also supported
m = Map[:k, :v, :key, :val]
m = Map(:k, :v, :key, :val)
m = Map.new(:k, :v, :key, :val)
m = Map[[:k, :v], [:key, :val]]
m = Map(:k => :v, :key => :val) # ruh-oh, the input hash loses order!
m = Map.new(:k => :v, :key => :val) # ruh-oh, the input hash loses
order!
m = Map.new
m[:a] = 0
m[:b] = 1
m[:c] = 2
p m.keys #=> [‘a’,‘b’,‘c’] ### always ordered!
p m.keys #=> [0,1,2] ### always ordered!
maps don’t care about symbol vs.string keys
p m[:a] #=> 0
p m[“a”] #=> 0
even via deep nesting
p m[:foo][‘bar’][:baz] #=> 42
many functions operate in a way one would expect from an ordered
container
m.update(:k2 => :v2)
m.update(:k2, :v2)
key_val_pair = m.shift
key_val_pair = m.pop
maps keep mapiness for even deep operations
m.update :nested => {:hashes => {:are => :converted}}
maps can give back clever little struct objects
m = Map(:foo => {:bar => 42})
s = m.struct
p s.foo.bar #=> 42
because option parsing is such a common use case for needing
string/symbol
indifference map.rb comes out of the box loaded with option support
def foo(*args, &block)
opts = Map.options(args)
a = opts.getopt(:a)
b = opts.getopt(:b, :default => false)
end
opts = Map.options(:a => 42, :b => nil, :c => false)
opts.getopt(:a) #=> 42
opts.getopt(:b) #=> nil
opts.getopt(:b, :default => 42) #=> 42
opts.getopt(:c) #=> false
opts.getopt(:d, :default => false) #=> false
this avoids such bugs as
options = {:read_only => false}
read_only = options[:read_only] || true # should be false but is true
with options this becomes
options = Map.options(:read_only => true)
read_only = options.getopt(:read_only, :default => false) #=> true
maps support some really nice operators that hashes/orderedhashes do
not
m = Map.new
m.set(:h, :a, 0, 42)
m.has?(:h, :a) #=> true
p m #=> {‘h’ => {‘a’ => [42]}}
m.set(:h, :a, 1, 42.0)
p m #=> {‘h’ => {‘a’ => [42, 42.0]}}
m.get(:h, :a, 1) #=> 42.0
m.get(:x, :y, :z) #=> nil
m[:x][:y][:z] #=> raises exception!
they also support some different iteration styles
m = Map.new
m.set(
[:a, :b, :c, 0] => 0,
[:a, :b, :c, 1] => 10,
[:a, :b, :c, 2] => 20,
[:a, :b, :c, 3] => 30
)
m.set(:x, :y, 42)
m.set(:x, :z, 42.0)
m.depth_first_each do |key, val|
p key => val
end
#=> [:a, :b, :c, 0] => 0
#=> [:a, :b, :c, 1] => 10
#=> [:a, :b, :c, 2] => 20
#=> [:a, :b, :c, 3] => 30
#=> [:x, :y] => 42
#=> [:x, :z] => 42.0
USAGE
see lib/map.rb and test/map_test.rb