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Ruby: Nils in an IF statement
Is there a clean way to avoid calling a method on nil in a nested params hash?

Let's say I try to access a hash like this:

my_hash['key1']['key2']['key3']

This is nice if key1, key2 and key3 exist in the hash(es), but what if, for example key1 doesn't exist?

Then I would get NoMethodError: undefined method [] for nil:NilClass. And nobody likes that.

So far I deal with this doing a conditional like:

if my_hash['key1'] && my_hash['key1']['key2'] ...

Is this appropriate, is there any other Rubiest way of doing so?

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1  
Sorry community. I tried to look for this and could not find it. Close if appropriate. – Nobita Apr 12 '12 at 20:48

marked as duplicate by tokland, mu is too short, undur_gongor, Sergio Tulentsev, Graviton Apr 13 '12 at 4:21

This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.

4 Answers

up vote 14 down vote accepted

There are many approaches to this.

Plenty of folks stick to plain ruby and chain the && guard tests.

You could use stdlib Hash#fetch too:

my_hash.fetch('key1',{}).fetch('key2',{}).fetch('key3',nil)

Some like chaining ActiveSupport's #try method.

my_hash.try(:[], 'key1').try(:[],'key2').try(:[],'key3')

Others use andand

myhash['key1'].andand['key2'].andand['key3']

Some people think egocentric nils are a good idea (though someone might hunt you down and torture you if they found you do this).

class NilClass
  def method_missing(*args); nil; end
end

my_hash['key1']['key2']['key3']

You could use Enumerable#reduce (or alias inject).

['key1','key2','key3'].reduce(my_hash) {|m,k| m && m[k] }

Or perhaps extend Hash or just your target hash object with a nested lookup method

module NestedHashLookup
  def nest *keys
    keys.reduce(self) {|m,k| m && m[k] }
  end
end

my_hash.extend(NestedHashLookup)
my_hash.nest 'key1', 'key2', 'key3'

Oh, and how could we forget the maybe monad?

Maybe.new(my_hash)['key1']['key2']['key3']
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I decided to do the fetch approach. But thanks for all the suggestions. – Nobita Apr 12 '12 at 20:44
You can also try the monadic gem, which has a Maybe (and other monads) which help with handling exceptions – Piotr Zolnierek May 4 '12 at 5:03
What are your thoughts on using rescue nil at the end of the statement? – jakeonrails May 17 at 18:46
@jakeonrails rescue nil is almost always evil. 1) it can capture and silently discard an exception you weren't aware could be thrown; 2) exceptions are computationally expensive flow control -- one should only use them for exceptional behavior, not expected behavior. – dbenhur May 17 at 20:24

Conditions my_hash['key1'] && my_hash['key1']['key2'] don't feel DRY.

Alternatives:

1) autovivification magic. From that post:

def autovivifying_hash
   Hash.new {|ht,k| ht[k] = autovivifying_hash}
end

Then, with your example:

my_hash = autovivifying_hash     
my_hash['key1']['key2']['key3']

It's similar to the Hash.fetch approach in that both operate with new hashes as default values, but this moves details to the creation time. Admittedly, this is a bit of cheating: it will never return 'nil' just an empty hash, which is created on the fly. Depending on your use case, this could be wasteful.

2) Abstract away the data structure with its lookup mechanism, and handle the non-found case behind the scenes. A simplistic example:

def lookup(model, key, *rest) 
    v = model[key]
    if rest.empty?
       v
    else
       v && lookup(v, *rest)
    end
end
#####

lookup(my_hash, 'key1', 'key2', 'key3')
=> nil or value

3) If you feel monadic you can take a look at this, Maybe

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You could grab a bit of code from the AS source:

class Object
  def try(*a, &b)
    if a.empty? && block_given?
      yield self
    else
      __send__(*a, &b)
    end
  end
end

And then use

my_hash.try(:[], 'key1').try(:[],'key2').try(:[],'key3')

Or meditate why you need such a nested data structure.

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Thanks for the answer Tass. Why would I meditate for that? Is it a code smell to have a three dimension hash? – Nobita Apr 12 '12 at 23:05

You could also use Object#andand.

my_hash['key1'].andand['key2'].andand['key3']
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