10

Testing out some code in both pry and irb, I get the following results:

[1] pry(main)> a = [1, 3, 5, 7, 0]
=> [1, 3, 5, 7, 0]
[2] pry(main)> a.any? {|obj| p obj; 3 / obj > 1}
1
=> true
[3] pry(main)> a.all? {|obj| p obj; 3 / obj > 1}
1
3
=> false

In [2] and [3] I see that there appears to be short-circuit evaluation that aborts the iteration as soon as possible, but is this guaranteed behaviour? Reading the documentation there is no mention of this behaviour. I realise that I can use inject instead as that will iterate over everything, but I'm interested in finding out what the official Ruby view is.

4
  • What do you mean by garanteed? In [2] it stopped evalution when it found any one, that is > then 1. I don't see any reason why it should go further. The same for [3], when it found any that is false it stopped. There are a lot of other methods to evaluate through whole sentence of objects... Dec 19, 2013 at 6:28
  • I mean that since the array has a zero in it, if I use inject I get a ZeroDivisionError, but will a conforming Ruby implementation (assuming there is a specification to conform to!) always stop at the earliest possible point and never try to divide by zero?
    – Ken Y-N
    Dec 19, 2013 at 6:39
  • 3
    I believe it is not even defined that any? or all? go through the array from start to end. To be save across ruby versions, you can't make such assumptions. For a single ruby version that might be OK.
    – tessi
    Dec 19, 2013 at 6:49
  • 1
    I think @tessi made the essential point: there is no requirement for any method that returns true or false to traverse a collection in any particular order. Dec 19, 2013 at 7:12

3 Answers 3

10

Yes.

In the final draft of the Ruby standard, all? is defined as such:

  1. Invoke the method each on the receiver
  2. For each element X which the method each yeilds:
    1. If block is given, call block with X as argument. If this call returns a falseish object, return false.
    2. If block is not given, and X is a falseish object, return false.
  3. Return true.

Note the word return in step 2. This guarantees short circuit evaluation. any? is defined similarly. However the standard is still a draft and I don't know which Ruby implementations (if any) aim to be standards-compliant.

3
  • "However the standard is still a draft" – The JIS standard was published by JSA on 2011-03-22: webdesk.jsa.or.jp/books/W11M0090/index/… Then passed on to ISO, which published it on 2012-02-14: iso.org/standard/59579.html JSA then published a revision aligning its standard with the version published by ISO on 2013-12-20. So, the original JIS standard published by JSA was published almost three years before your answer. Jul 26, 2018 at 7:53
  • "I don't know which Ruby implementations (if any) aim to be standards-compliant." – The only implementation explicitly based on the ISO spec is MRuby. The spec was created in a descriptive fashion, i.e. by describing what implementations are actually doing. In particular, the spec was designed such that existing implementations are conforming to the spec without any changes, which means that any major implementation in existence at the time the spec was created (2009-2010) is automatically compliant, this includes MRI, YARV, Rubinius, JRuby, IronRuby, MagLev, MacRuby, Ruby.NET, XRuby, … Jul 26, 2018 at 7:58
  • … and probably a couple I forgot. Note that, however, this obviously only applies to the state in 2009. Since then, implementations may have changed (for example, Rubinius has become very opinionated, and in some cases deviates from standard Ruby when they disagree with decisions made by the Ruby designers), and of course Ruby may have changed (frozen string literals come to mind). At some point, I think it will be impossible to be both compliant with ISO/JSA Ruby and current Ruby, and implementations will choose current Ruby. (It doesn't look like there is real incentive updating ISO Ruby.) Jul 26, 2018 at 8:01
5

The any? method just realizes the 'or' logic function over the Enumerable. It could be interpreted as statement:

y = x1 v x2 v x3 v ... v xn

And the all? method realizes 'and' logic function over the Enumerable. It also could be interpreted as statement:

y = x1 * x2 * x3 * ... * xn

Since the Array is an Enumerable, it also includes those methods. So, for the method any? the first occurience of true (exactly neither nil nor false) result breaks enumeration with true result. In example the yielded becomes true on number 4, so the methods breaks the execution the returns true:

[1,2,3,4,5].any? {| x | puts x ; x > 3 }
# 1
# 2
# 3
# 4
# => true

Also you can apply DeMorgan's rule to the function any?, and to use all? method:

![1,2,3,4,5].all? {| x | puts x ; x <= 3 }
# 1
# 2
# 3
# 4
# => true

For the method all? the first occurience of either false or nil result do something similar, i.e. returns false. In example the yielded becomes false on number 3, so the methods breaks the execution the returns false:

[1,2,3,4,5].all? {| x | puts x ; x < 3 }
# 1
# 2
# 3
# => false

And with DeMorgan's transformation to use any? method:

![1,2,3,4,5].any? {| x | puts x ; x >= 3 }
# 1
# 2
# 3
# => false
1

I think there is some ambiguity here.

Consider the following:

RUBY_VERSION
=> "2.3.7"

When yielding to a block:

[1,2,3,4,5].all? {| x | puts x ; x < 3 }
# 1
# 2
# 3
# => false

When not yielding to a block:

def a
  puts "in a"
  true
end

def b
  puts "in b" 
  false
end

def c
  puts "in c"
  true
end

[a,b,c].all?
# in a
# in b
# in c
# => false

Seems like condition #2:

If block is not given, and X is a falseish object, return false.

Is not valid.

2
  • Yes, this is what I'm running into now (though I am on Ruby 2.6.6). My code is definitely *NOT* short circuiting when there is no block given.
    – istrasci
    Apr 16, 2021 at 21:44
  • This is not doing what you think it's doing. Each method is called during the list creation. So those puts are being called before all? is called. Aug 13, 2023 at 4:08

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