Methods
Instance Public methods
_original_sum_with_required_identity(identity = nil, &block)
Link
doesn't work well bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/13446
Alias for: sum
exclude?(object)
Link
The negative of the Enumerable#include?
. Returns
true
if the collection does not include the object.
index_by()
Link
Convert an enumerable to a hash.
people.index_by(&:login)
# => { "nextangle" => <Person ...>, "chade-" => <Person ...>, ...}
people.index_by { |person| "#{person.first_name} #{person.last_name}" }
# => { "Chade- Fowlersburg-e" => <Person ...>, "David Heinemeier Hansson" => <Person ...>, ...}
many?()
Link
Returns true
if the enumerable has more than 1 element.
Functionally equivalent to enum.to_a.size > 1
. Can be
called with a block too, much like any?, so people.many? { |p| p.age
> 26 }
returns true
if more than one person is over
26.
pluck(*keys)
Link
Convert an enumerable to an array based on the given key.
[{ name: "David" }, { name: "Rafael" }, { name: "Aaron" }].pluck(:name)
# => ["David", "Rafael", "Aaron"]
[{ id: 1, name: "David" }, { id: 2, name: "Rafael" }].pluck(:id, :name)
# => [[1, "David"], [2, "Rafael"]]
sum(identity = nil, &block)
Link
Calculates a sum from the elements.
payments.sum { |p| p.price * p.tax_rate }
payments.sum(&:price)
The latter is a shortcut for:
payments.inject(0) { |sum, p| sum + p.price }
It can also calculate the sum without the use of a block.
[5, 15, 10].sum # => 30
['foo', 'bar'].sum # => "foobar"
[[1, 2], [3, 1, 5]].sum # => [1, 2, 3, 1, 5]
The default sum of an empty list is zero. You can override this default:
[].sum(Payment.new(0)) { |i| i.amount } # => Payment.new(0)
Also aliased as: _original_sum_with_required_identity
without(*elements)
Link
Returns a copy of the enumerable without the specified elements.
["David", "Rafael", "Aaron", "Todd"].without "Aaron", "Todd"
# => ["David", "Rafael"]
{foo: 1, bar: 2, baz: 3}.without :bar
# => {foo: 1, baz: 3}