17

I have this string and I'm wondering how to convert it to a Hash.

"{:account_id=>4444, :deposit_id=>3333}"
1

5 Answers 5

17

The way suggested in miku's answer is indeed easiest and unsafest.

# DO NOT RUN IT
eval '{:surprise => "#{system \"rm -rf / \"}"}'
# SERIOUSLY, DON'T

Consider using a different string representation of your hashes, e.g. JSON or YAML. It's way more secure and at least equally robust.

10
  • 1
    nop these are rails post params so i guess i can't use json or yaml
    – zoras
    Dec 23, 2011 at 9:46
  • 1
    Interesting. Controllers in Rails usually receive POST params as Ruby objects. How come you get them as a string?
    – Jan
    Dec 23, 2011 at 9:51
  • 5
    lets hope no one runs that to "see what it will do" :-/
    – Pavling
    Dec 23, 2011 at 11:04
  • 19
    this takes really long when I run it
    – nurettin
    Oct 23, 2013 at 14:09
  • 3
    yeah maybe at least explain what the code you wrote does. i feel like it's v possible someone new to ruby/coding might run it anyway just to see. so for that person: it would delete all of your files.
    – volx757
    Jan 22, 2016 at 18:02
16

With a little replacement, you may use YAML:

require 'yaml'

p YAML.load(
  "{:account_id=>4444, :deposit_id=>3333}".gsub(/=>/, ': ')
  )

But this works only for this specific, simple string. Depending on your real data you may get problems.

2
  • Worked like a charm! I passed mine into HashWithIndifferentAccess.new to get a hash like the param hash.
    – Josh
    Oct 6, 2016 at 0:25
  • This would only work with data types that are native to YAML. A regular expression, for example, wouldn't be parseable in this way.
    – Hosam Aly
    Dec 6, 2021 at 11:53
12

if your string hash is some sort of like this (it can be nested or plain hash)

stringify_hash = "{'account_id'=>4444, 'deposit_id'=>3333, 'nested_key'=>{'key1' => val1, 'key2' => val2, 'key3' => nil}}"

you can convert it into hash like this without using eval which is dangerous

desired_hash = JSON.parse(stringify_hash.gsub("'",'"').gsub('=>',':').gsub('nil','null'))

and for the one you posted where the key is a symbol you can use like this

JSON.parse(string_hash.gsub(':','"').gsub('=>','":'))
1
  • 1
    Hashes contain 'null' for null objects, where as this contains 'nil', so that would need to be replaced too. Mar 19, 2015 at 12:12
11

The easiest and unsafest would be to just evaluate the string:

>> s = "{:account_id=>4444, :deposit_id=>3333}"
>> h = eval(s)
=> {:account_id=>4444, :deposit_id=>3333}
>> h.class
=> Hash
2
  • I'm getting these in rails post params. Isn't there a safe way to convert string into hash other than eval.
    – zoras
    Dec 23, 2011 at 9:45
  • 1
    I don't know your setup, but maybe it would be easier to get back a hash in the first place. Otherwise, ruby supports some TAINT levels, see: ruby-doc.org/docs/ProgrammingRuby/html/taint.html
    – miku
    Dec 23, 2011 at 9:54
4

Guess I never posted my workaround for this... Here it goes,

# strip the hash down
stringy_hash = "account_id=>4444, deposit_id=>3333"

# turn string into hash
Hash[stringy_hash.split(",").collect{|x| x.strip.split("=>")}]
1
  • 6
    This will fail to split fields correctly if you have any data that contains a , or =>. { :text => "Welcome, friends.", delim => "=>" }
    – Matt
    Jul 19, 2014 at 12:28

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