2

I am using ActiveRecord. It has a handy method called group_by. When I use it with my activerecord objects, i get the below hash:

{["junior"]=>[#<Lead id: 1, created_at: "2015-02-13 02:34:39", updated_at: "2015-02-13 02:35:27", case_enabled: true>, #<Lead id: 2, created_at: "2015-02-13 20:48:19", updated_at: "2015-02-13 20:48:19", case_enabled: nil>, ["senior"]=>[#<Lead id: 3, created_at: "2015-02-13 20:48:19", updated_at: "2015-02-13 20:48:19", case_enabled: nil>, #<Lead id: 4, created_at: "2015-02-13 20:49:16", updated_at: "2015-02-13 20:49:16", case_enabled: nil>]} 

However, I want a hash with subhashes that contain the collection as an ActiveRecord::Relation and column data. So this is what I come up with:

i = 0
r = group.reduce({}) do |acc, (k,v)|
  h = {}
  active_record_relation = where(id: v.map(&:id))
  h["#{k.first}_collection"] = active_record_relation
  h["#{k.first}_columns"] = Classification.where(code: k.first).first.default_fields
  acc[i] = h
  i += 1
  acc
end

And it gives me the results I want:

{0=>{"junior_collection"=>#<ActiveRecord::Relation [# ... ]>, "junior_columns"=>[ ... ]}, 1=>{"senior_collection"=>#<ActiveRecord::Relation [# ... ]>, "senior_columns"=>[ ... ]}}   

The fact that I had to add the i variable makes me feel like this is not the ruby way to do this. But I looked at the docs and I didn't find a way to add an index to reduce, since I am already passing a hash into reduce. Is there another way?

0

1 Answer 1

11

Your way is probably good enough but you can avoid separately tracking the index by doing .each.with_index.reduce(...) { |acc, ((k,v),i)| ... }, like so:

h = {'a' => 'b', 'c' => 'd', 'e' => 'f'}
h.each.with_index.reduce('OK') do |acc, ((k, v), i)|
  puts "acc=#{acc}, k=#{k}, v=#{v}, i=#{i}"
  acc
end
# acc=OK, k=a, v=b, i=0
# acc=OK, k=c, v=d, i=1
# acc=OK, k=e, v=f, i=2
# => "OK"

Not sure if it's more Rubyish than your way =\

1
  • 3
    Readers: Enumerable#each_with_index could be used instead of each.with_index. As both return enumerators, it really doesn't matter which is used. One small advantage of Enumerator#with_index (though not useful here) is that you can give each_index an argument equal to the starting point for the index (e.g., with_index(1)). Feb 14, 2015 at 2:51

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.