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.