If ENV[] is a hash-like object (per http://ruby-doc.org/core-2.0/ENV.html) why can't I call .slice(*keys) on it? What is the best way for extracting specific key-value pairs from the Environment into another Hash?
2 Answers
Because there is no slice method on a hash. If you want the keys to the ENV you can call:
ENV.keys
If you want to copy over a value to a new hash you can call:
# ex. Copying over the PATH variable from ENV hash.
hash = {}
hash[:path] = ENV["PATH"]
For more info on ruby hashes read the docs for hash and enumerable:
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Ah. I was confusing the Ruby Hash with a Rails Hash. Rails adds a .slice(*keys) method to its Hash object, but that doesn't apply to ENV. Thanks for the answer.– user1113883Oct 3, 2013 at 6:02
Assuming you have an array of keys for the env variables you want to grab:
keys_wanted = %w{key1 key2 etc}
Using values_at
, zip
and Hash[]
You can use values_at
to get an array of the corresponding values:
values_wanted = ENV.values_at(*keys_wanted)
Which you could then zip up with the keys into a new hash:
Hash[keys_wanted.zip(values_wanted)]
Using select
This is a little more straightforward but has the downside of having to search through the keys_wanted array for each key.
ENV.select {|key| keys_wanted.include? key }
Documentation:
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Thanks. Your answer is helpful in answering the second part of my question, whereas @demondeac11 also answered my question about why slice doesn't work.– user1113883Oct 3, 2013 at 6:06