0

I want to iterate over a hardcoded list of strings, and when they run out, I want to continue to iterate over STDIN.

Is there a way to concatenate two iterables, or something like that?

Guava provides this sort of thing for Java: http://docs.guava-libraries.googlecode.com/git/javadoc/com/google/common/collect/Iterables.html#concat(java.lang.Iterable)

From that page: Combines two iterables into a single iterable. The returned iterable has an iterator that traverses the elements in a, followed by the elements in b. The source iterators are not polled until necessary.

If I had a "concat" method, I would do something like this:

my_lines = ["line1", "line2", "line3"]

(my_lines.each).concat(STDIN.each).each do
    |line|
    puts "LINE = |#{line}|"
end

Does ruby provide something out of the box to do this? If not, is there a popular idiom for accomplishing this?

1

1 Answer 1

1

You can create the concat method yourself:

class Enumerator
  def concat(*enums)
    Enumerator.new do |y|
      self.each { |i| y << i }
      enums.each { |e| e.each { |i| y << i } }
    end
  end
end

my_lines = ["line1", "line2", "line3"]

(my_lines.each).concat(STDIN.each).each do
    |line|
    puts "LINE = |#{line.chomp}|"
end
# LINE = |line1|
# LINE = |line2|
# LINE = |line3|
=> kkk
# LINE = |kkk|
=> dsf;sdlf
#LINE = |dsf;sdlf|

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.