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I've been learning Ruby and using Thor in a self-project and I would like to know, how do I split arguments using Thor. For example:

scaffold Post name:string title:string content:text

I would like to know how to split name:string, title:string and content:text into an object array with "name" and "type".

3 Answers 3

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Consider you have a file scaffold.rb with following contents:

array = ARGV.map { |column_string| column_string.split(":").first }
puts array.inspect # or 'p array'

Then, if we run ruby scaffold.rb name:string title:string content:text, you will get

["name", "title", "content"]

If our code was p ARGV, then output will be ["name:string", "title:string", "content:text"]. So, we will get whatever we pass after, ruby scaffold.rb as an array split by space in ARGV variable inside the code. We can manipulate this array as we wish, inside the code.

Disclaimer: I dont know Thor, but wanted to show how this is done in Ruby

1

My recommendation would be to use whatever Rails uses so you're not reinventing the wheel. I dug around a little in the generator source and found that rails is using a GeneratedAttribute class to convert the arguments to objects.

From the generator named_base source you'll see they are splitting the arguments on ':' and passing those to Rails::Generators::GeneratedAttribute:

def parse_attributes! #:nodoc:
  self.attributes = (attributes || []).map do |key_value|
    name, type = key_value.split(':')
    Rails::Generators::GeneratedAttribute.new(name, type)
  end
end

You don't have to use the GeneratedAttribute class, but it's there if you want it.

-1
"your:string:here".split(":") => ["your", "string", "here"]

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