0

I have an array in ruby, and I am setting the index to id of object like below.

My first question is:

This code works:

@array = Array.new(@objects.size)
for i in [email protected]
  @array[i] = @objects[i].value
end

but when I do:

 @array[@objects[i].id] = @objects[i].value

it says:

undefined method [] for nil::NilClass

I tried putting 100 or 1000 instead of i to make sure it's not about "index out of range", but those worked, I tried converting id to int by using to_i even though it should already be an int, but it still doesn't work. I don't get it.

My second question is:

If I get to make the ids work, does saying Array.new(@objects.size) become usless?

I am not using indexes 0 to size but IDs, so what is happening? Is it initializing indexes 0...size to nil or is it just creating a space for up to x objects?

EDIT:

So I've been told it is better to use Hash for this, and I agree, But I still seem to have the same error in the same situation (just changed Array.new(@objects.size)toHash.new)

4 Answers 4

1

Thats not how Arrays work in Ruby. You can however use a hash to do this, and look them up using the method you want:

@lookup_hash = Hash.new
for i in [email protected]
  @lookup_hash[@objects[i].id] = @objects[i].value
end

Now you can do:

@lookup_hash[@some_object.id]

And it will return that object's value as you have stored it.

Additional Info

You could also rewrite your loop like this, since you dont need the index anymore:

@lookup_hash = Hash.new
@objects.each do |obj|
  @lookup_hash[obj.id] = obj.value
end

A little bit more readable in my opinion.

5
  • Still seems to give me the same error, I tried doing p @objects[i].id it prints 2. When i hard code 2 for the hash key, it works, but when i use the @objects[i].id it says undefined method [] for nil::NilClass
    – Ave
    Apr 23, 2011 at 20:38
  • Both Array and Hash have a [] method for looking up items they contain. The nil::NilClass error may indicate you are trying to use that on something that isn't one of those, so maybe a typo, or something? Can you re-post the code you are using maybe using pastie.org so it doesn't get lost in the comment formatting Apr 23, 2011 at 20:41
  • Sounds like you're calling [] on nil. Apr 23, 2011 at 20:42
  • It can't be a typo I'm just swapping the indexes to a hardcoded number and it works, I even tried printing the id. I will paste teh real code in a second.
    – Ave
    Apr 23, 2011 at 20:44
  • In ruby <1.9 .id is a method on Object - everything has a .id. In this case it's confusing, maybe it causes the unexpected nil.
    – steenslag
    Apr 23, 2011 at 22:07
1

Your're trying to use an array like a hash. Try this:

Hash[@objects.map{|o| [o.id, o.value] }]

Take a look at the Array and Hash documentations.

1
  1. @array = @objects.map { |obj| obj.value }
  2. You can, but you don't need to specify the size when creating an array. Anyway, try to use the functional capabilities of Ruby (map, select, inject) instead of C-like imperative loops.
2
  • what would my array contain? how will it understand i just want a certain value from the object
    – Ave
    Apr 23, 2011 at 20:54
  • 1
    @Ave. Try it so you can see how it works. Map is the fundamental operation of funcional programming: xs = [1,2,3] ys = xs.map { 2 * x } -> ys = [2,4,6]. code.google.com/p/tokland/wiki/RubyFunctionalProgramming
    – tokland
    Apr 23, 2011 at 21:14
0

You could use map to do this in a rubyish way:

@array = @objects.map { |o| o.value }

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