How do I convert hash keys to method names?
This is my hash:
tempData = {"a" =>开发者_JAVA技巧; 100, "here" => 200, "c" => "hello"}
I need to access the hash keys as a method like:
tempData.a #100
tempData.here # 200
You could just wrap up your hash in an OpenStruct:
require 'ostruct'
tempData = {"a" => 100, "here" => 200, "c" => "hello"}
os = OpenStruct.new tempData
os.a #=> 100
os.here #=> 200
If you really really wanted to, you could also monkey-patch the Hash
class, but I'd advise against that:
class Hash
def method_missing(m, *args, &blk)
fetch(m) { fetch(m.to_s) { super } }
end
end
tempData = {"a" => 100, "here" => 200, "c" => "hello"}
tempData.a #=> 100
Update: In my personal extensions library I added a Hash#to_ostruct method. This will recursively convert a hash into an OpenStruct
including all nested hashes.
There is another way to do this.
JSON.parse(tempData.to_json, object_class: OpenStruct)
that will give object
#<OpenStruct a=100, here=200, c="hello">
In this way nested hash
also will be converted to OpenStruct Object
tempData = {a: { b: { c: 3}}, foo: 200, msg: 'test msg'}
obj = JSON.parse(tempData.to_json, object_class: OpenStruct)
Now we are able to call
obj.a.b.c # 3
obj.foo # 200
obj.msg # 'test msg'
Hope this will help someone.
Alternatively, if it’s just a small script it might be more convenient to just extend Hash
itself
class Hash
def method_missing sym,*
fetch(sym){fetch(sym.to_s){super}}
end
end
method_missing
is a magic method that is called whenever your code tries to call a method that does not exist. Ruby will intercept the failing call at run time and let you handle it so your program can recover gracefully. The implementation above tries to access the hash using the method name as a symbol, the using the method name as a string, and eventually fails with Ruby's built-in method missing error.
NB for a more complex script, where adding this behavior might break other third-party gems, you might alternatively use a module and extend each instance
module H def method_missing sym,* fetch(sym){fetch(sym.to_s){super}} end end the = { answer: 42 } the.extend(H) the.answer # => 42
and for greater convenience you can even propagate the module down to nested hashes
module H def method_missing sym,* r = fetch(sym){fetch(sym.to_s){super}} Hash === r ? r.extend(H) : r end end the = { answer: { is: 42 } } the.extend(H) the.answer.is # => 42
If the hash is inside a module, you can define methods on that module (or class) dynamically using define_method
. For example:
module Version
module_function
HASH = {
major: 1,
minor: 2,
patch: 3,
}
HASH.each do |name, value|
define_method(name) do
return value
end
end
end
This will define a Version
module with major
, minor
, and patch
methods that return 1, 2, and 3, respectively.
you can extend the Hash class in the following way.
class Hash
# return nil whenever the key doesn't exist
def method_missing(m, *opts)
if self.has_key?(m.to_s)
return self[m.to_s]
elsif self.has_key?(m.to_sym)
return self[m.to_sym]
end
return nil
# comment out above line and replace with line below if you want to return an error
# super
end
end
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