1

So I am pushing some elements on my array like this:

upd_city_list << [ j.children[0].text.strip!.gsub(/\s+\W/, ''), j.children[1].text, j.children[1][:href] ]

The above is in an iterator (hence the use of j).

The issue is that from time to time, the j.children[0].text turns up as nil, and Ruby doesn't like that.

I could add a bunch of if statements before this assignment, but that seems a bit inelegant to me.

How do I handle nil cases in this situation in an elegant way?

One possible solution is, when there is a nil value, just push the string none onto the array....but what would that look like?

Thanks.

Edit1:

This is the error I am getting:

NoMethodError: private method ‘gsub’ called for nil:NilClass

6 Answers 6

2

The real problem is that strip! returns nil when there are no changes to the string. Your text method is returning a string, it is your strip! method is returning nil. I don't know why it does this. I dislike it, too.

This case of the problem will go away if you just change strip! to strip

In a more general sense, you might create an object to return the array for you. You don't want to go changing (what I assume is) Nokogiri, but you can wrap it in something to hide the train wrecks that result.

1
  • Thanks for the explanation, makes total sense and you are right. May 26, 2012 at 17:19
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You should replace j.children[0].text.strip! with one of two things:

(j.children[0].text || 'none').strip

or

j.children[0].text.to_s.strip

These will, of course, have different effects when the text is nil. I think your ACTUAL problem is that strip! was returning nil, and that should have been obvious to you from the error message.

3
  • So just to be clear, it would look like this, right: j.children[0].text.to_s.strip!.gsub(/\s+\W/, '')? May 26, 2012 at 8:04
  • Btw, added the error message I am getting. Still getting it - even with your suggestions. May 26, 2012 at 8:06
  • Yes it would look like that if you follow my instructions. I suspect that strip! sometimes returns nil. Try using strip and see my edited answer. May 26, 2012 at 16:16
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This might be the case for one to use null object programming pattern. Nil is not a good null object. Try reading here and here. Null object is the elegant way.

0

nil or a_string will be a_string

so what about (j.children[0].text or 'none')

1
  • That's possible, but I'd use symbol :none, what if text itself turns out to be 'none'. May 26, 2012 at 7:52
0

If you're in rails, this is a great use for the try method.

Also seems that your strip and gsub are redundent. Please consider this implementation:

descriptive_name_1 = j.children[0].text.try(:strip)
descriptive_name_2 = j.children[1].text
descriptive_name_3 = j.children[1][:href]
updated_city_list << [ descriptive_name_1 , descriptive_name_2, descriptive_name_3 ]

w/o try

descriptive_name_1 = j.children[0].text.to_s.strip 
descriptive_name_2 = j.children[1].text
descriptive_name_3 = j.children[1][:href]
updated_city_list << [ descriptive_name_1 , descriptive_name_2, descriptive_name_3 ]
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  • I am not using Rails, just a Ruby script. I had thought about doing something like this, but this isn't as elegant as I would have liked....however, if I can't get it uber elegant, then I will default to this. Thanks! May 26, 2012 at 8:09
  • j.children[0].text.to_s.strip is also safe since nil.to_s evaluates to ""
    – Chris Mohr
    May 26, 2012 at 8:09
  • 1
    if you have a preference for a one liner, you could always go back to: upd_city_list << [ j.children[0].text.to_s.strip, j.children[1].text, j.children[1][:href] ]
    – Chris Mohr
    May 26, 2012 at 8:38
  • Thanks much, you are right Chris. I don't know why someone downvoted this answer, but I upvoted you back to 0 :( I do prefer a more elegant one-liner though. May 26, 2012 at 17:20
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If you're in the rails environment you could try try method: https://github.com/rails/rails/blob/82d41c969897cca28bb318f7caf301d520a2fbf3/activesupport/lib/active_support/core_ext/object/try.rb#L50

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