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?
#gets
method of STDIN