You should go with the map method, it's better and uses less memory. Another solution is with while loop. Good to know this way too, because often you may need to use the while loop.
At example 2, if you want to take each odd index in the an array as a key in the hash, and each even index as a value in the hash
Example 1:
some_array = ["one", "two", "three", "four", "five"]
def to_hash(arr)
counter = 0
new_hash = Hash.new(0)
while counter < arr.length
new_hash[counter] = arr[counter]
counter += 1
end
return new_hash
end
puts to_hash(arr)
# Output
{0=>"one", 1=>"two", 2=>"three", 3=>"four", 4=>"five"}
Example 2 -
Perhaps after getting data as a string, and you split this string to an array, and now you want to convert to key, value.
some_array = ['KBD', 'King Bedroom', 'QBD', 'Queen Bedroom', 'DBD', 'Double Bedroom', 'SGLB', 'Single Bedroom']
def to_hash(arr)
new_hash = Hash.new(0)
counter = 0
while counter < arr.length
new_hash[arr[counter]] = arr[counter+1]
counter += 2
end
return "#{new_hash}"
end
puts to_key_value_hash(some_array)
# Output
{"KBD"=>"King Bedroom", "QBD"=>"Queen Bedroom", "DBD"=>"Double Bedroom", "SGLB"=>"Single Bedroom"}
Many ways to do this, but just saying not to forget the while loop.
Hash#merge!
. Though, now that I think about it, maybe it would be easier to just iterate over the hash and modify the array as needed.