6

Is there any difference between:

@attr[:field] = new_value

and

@attr.merge(:field => new_value)
2
  • 3
    this is not rails specific, it is pure ruby afaik May 16, 2011 at 14:52
  • yep, so used to say Rails that sometimes I forget what is pure Ruby, thanks.
    – eMgz
    May 16, 2011 at 15:14

4 Answers 4

9

If you're using merge! instead of merge, there is no difference.
The only difference is that you can use multiple fields (meaning: another hash) in the merge parameters.

Example:

   h1 = { "a" => 100, "b" => 200 }
   h2 = { "b" => 254, "c" => 300 }
   h3 = h1.merge(h2)    
   puts h1         # => {"a" => 100, "b" => 200}
   puts h3         # => {"a"=>100, "b"=>254, "c"=>300}
   h1.merge!(h2)   
   puts h1         # => {"a"=>100, "b"=>254, "c"=>300}

When assigning single values, I would prefer h[:field] = new_val over merge for readability reasons and I guess it is faster than merging.

You can also take a look at the Hash-rdoc: http://ruby-doc.org/core/classes/Hash.html#M000759

3

They do the same thing, however:

@attr[:field] = new_value

is more efficient, since no hash traversing is necessary.

1

Merge returns a new hash at a different location merging other_hashes into self but Merge! operated like "update" returning self hash, copying at self-location.

    h1 = { "a": 1 }
    h2 = { "b": 2 }

    def merge_hash (h1,h2)
      puts h1                 # {:a=> 1}
      puts h1.object_id       # 340720
  
      h1 = h1.merge(h2)
      puts h1                 # {:a=>1, :b=>2}
      puts h1.object_id       # 340760
    end

    merge_hash(h1, h2)
    puts h1                     # {:a=>1}
    puts h1.object_id           # 340720


    def merge_hash (h1,h2)
      puts h1                 # {:a=>1}
      puts h1.object_id       # 340720
  
      h1 = h1.merge!(h2)
      puts h1                 # {:a=>1, :b=>2}
      puts h1.object_id       # 340720
    end

    merge_hash(h1, h2)
    puts h1                     # {:a=>1, :b=>2}
    puts h1.object_id           # 340720
1
  • Perfect! this is something I was looking for.
    – rushikesh
    Sep 2, 2022 at 10:33
0

You can use non-bang merge to use hashes in a functional programming style.

Ruby Functional Programming has under Don't update variables

Don't update hashes

No:

hash = {:a => 1, :b => 2}
hash[:c] = 3
hash

Yes:

hash = {:a => 1, :b => 2}
new_hash = hash.merge(:c => 3)

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