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.
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...inject
I get aZeroDivisionError
, 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?any?
orall?
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.