0
<% @user.dids.each_with_index{ |did, i| %>
  <li><%=h @user.dids %></li>
<% } %>

result to display

#<Did:0x7fc4c55f4bf0>#<Did:0x7fc4c55f4ba0>#
<Did:0x7fc4c55f4b50>#<Did:0x7fc4c55f4b00>#
<Did:0x7fc4c55f4a88>#<Did:0x7fc4c55f4a10>#
<Did:0x7fc4c55f49c0>#<Did:0x7fc4c55f4970>

I almost sleep and did not think, tell me somebody how to display the hash data

4
  • How you want to show this? Fastest way I can think is by using @user.dids.inspect. But this is not like, user friendly. P) Jan 12, 2013 at 2:09
  • We don't know what the data looks like: is each array element a hash? Display the key and value? Jan 12, 2013 at 2:10
  • value, data for output is a numbers ex. 00123123123 Jan 12, 2013 at 2:19
  • please show me less than 2 variants Jan 12, 2013 at 2:20

3 Answers 3

0

You could just use the debug function in rails

<%= debug @user %>
1
  • It displays the hash data, just sayin.
    – zarazan
    Jan 12, 2013 at 3:34
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First off, your loop is a bit strange. It seems to me that you should have

<% @user.dids.each_with_index{ |did, i| %>
  <li><%=h did %></li>
<% } %>

In your version, you are printing the entire @user.dids with each iteration.

Also, how is the class Did defined? If you are in Rails and Did is an ActiveRecord model, you should have the .to_json method available to you (options and info here):

<% @user.dids.each_with_index{ |did, i| %>
  <li><%=h did.to_json %></li>
<% } %>
0

OK I sleep so correctly

<% @user.dids.each_with_index{ |did, i| %>
  <li><%= did.did %></li>
<% } %>

Thank you for helping colleagues

1
  • You could also use a .map method: <%= @user.dids.map { |did| "<li>#{did.did}</li>".html_safe } %>
    – Andrei
    Jan 12, 2013 at 5:55

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