3

Given a JSON object

{"a": 1, "b":2}

and a value object that is derived from a struct:

class A < Stuct.new(:a, :b)
end

How would I make an instance of A that has the values from the JSON?

I am trying:

 a = A.new(JSON.parse({a:1,b:2}.to_json).values)
 => #<struct A a=[1, 2], b=nil>

But I would expect a->1, and b->2

3 Answers 3

5

Try using:

a = A.new(*JSON[json].values)
a.class # => A < #<Class:0x00000102955828>

The problem is that values returns an array, but you need the individual elements of the array. Using * "splats" the array back into its components, which makes Struct happy when you pass the values to new.


EDIT:

This will fail if the ordering of the JSON and the Struct do not match!

This forces the order of the values.

a = A.new(*JSON[json].values_at('a', 'b'))
{
    :a => 1,
    :b => 2
}
a.class # => A < #<Class:0x00000102955828>

JSON preserves the hash insertion order, as does Ruby, so, JSON rendered and parsed by Ruby will be correct. JSON rendered by something that doesn't preserve the order could be a problem, but values_at fixes the problem.

Note that JSON converts symbols to strings, so the keys passed to values_at have to be strings, not symbols.

6
  • This will fail if the ordering of the JSON and the Struct do not match!
    – akuhn
    Feb 18, 2013 at 18:44
  • It will, but JSON preserves ordering, as do Ruby hashes. So, if the JSON is generated by Ruby, then received by Ruby, the order should be intact. But there's a simple workaround I'll add. Feb 18, 2013 at 18:46
  • 1
    If, yes. But the JSON can just as well come from the web, and then we've introduced a really hard to find bug!
    – akuhn
    Feb 18, 2013 at 18:48
  • 1
    It's a simple fix. See the code. It should never introduce a hard-to-find bug if you program defensively. Knowing where your data comes from is part of that. If you don't control the data, then you force it to the form you need prior to trying to process it. Feb 18, 2013 at 18:51
  • thanks, in fact, I needed the values_at trick, since I am having some nested value objects from a Struct
    – poseid
    Feb 18, 2013 at 21:03
3

If it does not have to be a predefined struct, this will work

a = Struct.new(*json.keys).new(*json.values)
1
  • Struct.new(* ({'a' => 1}.keys) ) causes: NameError: identifier a needs to be constant. Seems that you can't pass strings as the member names. You could use json.keys.map(&:to_sym), but if your ruby is < 2.2, this could cause a DOS because symbols aren't GC'd.
    – Kelvin
    Feb 17, 2017 at 21:57
1

You can use the splat operator to pass the array values as arguments to the new function.

a = A.new(*{a:1,b:2}.values)

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