22

I have an array of hashes as following:

[{"k1"=>"v1", "k2"=>"75.1%"}, {"k1"=>"v2", "k2"=>"-NA-"}, {"k1"=>"v3", "k2"=>"5.1%"}]

Now, I want to first check whether the array contains a hash with key "k1" with value "v3". If yes, then I want to delete that hash from the array.

The result should be:

[{"k1"=>"v1", "k2"=>"75.1%"}, {"k1"=>"v2", "k2"=>"-NA-"}]

2 Answers 2

62

Use Array#delete_if:

arr = [{"k1"=>"v1", "k2"=>"75.1%"}, {"k1"=>"v2", "k2"=>"-NA-"}, {"k1"=>"v3", "k2"=>"5.1%"}]

arr.delete_if { |h| h["k1"] == "v3" }
#=> [{"k1"=>"v1", "k2"=>"75.1%"}, {"k1"=>"v2", "k2"=>"-NA-"}]

If there is no hash matching the condition, the array is left unchanged.

1
  • What if I want to do something in the else case, i.e. h["k1"] != "v3". How do we do that?
    – Hellboy
    Nov 17, 2015 at 10:20
15

You can do this with Array#reject(If you don't want to modify the receiver) and also with Array#reject!(If you want to modify the receiver)

arr = [{"k1"=>"v1", "k2"=>"75.1%"}, {"k1"=>"v2", "k2"=>"-NA-"}, {"k1"=>"v3", "k2"=>"5.1%"}]
p arr.reject { |h| h["k1"] == "v3" }
# >> [{"k1"=>"v1", "k2"=>"75.1%"}, {"k1"=>"v2", "k2"=>"-NA-"}]    

arr = [{"k1"=>"v1", "k2"=>"75.1%"}, {"k1"=>"v2", "k2"=>"-NA-"}, {"k1"=>"v3", "k2"=>"5.1%"}]
p arr.reject! { |h| h["k1"] == "v3" }
# >> [{"k1"=>"v1", "k2"=>"75.1%"}, {"k1"=>"v2", "k2"=>"-NA-"}]
1
  • Can I use this for rejecting multiple array elements ?
    – harika
    Oct 1, 2020 at 17:12

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.