138

More of a syntax curiosity than a problem to solve...

I have two arrays of equal length, and want to iterate over them both at once - for example, to output both their values at a certain index.

@budget = [ 100, 150, 25, 105 ]
@actual = [ 120, 100, 50, 100 ]

I know that I can use each_index and index into the arrays like so:

@budget.each_index do |i|
  puts @budget[i]
  puts @actual[i]
end

Is there a Ruby way to do this better? Something like this?

# Obviously doesn't achieve what I want it to - but is there something like this?
[@budget, @actual].each do |budget, actual|
  puts budget
  puts actual
end
2
  • 1
    are both the arrays of equal sizes?
    – Anurag
    Aug 26, 2010 at 22:27
  • 1
    Yep - both known to be of the same length
    – nfm
    Aug 26, 2010 at 22:32

7 Answers 7

289
>> @budget = [ 100, 150, 25, 105 ]
=> [100, 150, 25, 105]
>> @actual = [ 120, 100, 50, 100 ]
=> [120, 100, 50, 100]

>> @budget.zip @actual
=> [[100, 120], [150, 100], [25, 50], [105, 100]]

>> @budget.zip(@actual).each do |budget, actual|
?>   puts budget
>>   puts actual
>> end
100
120
150
100
25
50
105
100
=> [[100, 120], [150, 100], [25, 50], [105, 100]]
11
  • 13
    '.each' can unfold array elements? I wonder how much more of Ruby I don't know :/ Aug 26, 2010 at 22:35
  • 5
    If you're going to use an expression like that, it's always best to use parentheses for method calls, just in case. @budget.zip(@actual).each
    – AboutRuby
    Aug 26, 2010 at 22:48
  • 1
    @AboutRuby: In this case, it's needed! Fixed. Aug 27, 2010 at 6:19
  • 2
    when i see ruby lines like this, i throw my hands in the air and wal round the room like a champ!
    – Igbanam
    Oct 14, 2012 at 0:53
  • 10
    Does this scale? If I have 2 10000 item arrays does this require making a 20,000 item array? The docs suggest this. Dec 4, 2012 at 14:15
21

Use the Array.zip method and pass it a block to iterate over the corresponding elements sequentially.

0
21

There is another way to iterate over two arrays at once using enumerators:

2.1.2 :003 > enum = [1,2,4].each
 => #<Enumerator: [1, 2, 4]:each> 
2.1.2 :004 > enum2 = [5,6,7].each
 => #<Enumerator: [5, 6, 7]:each> 
2.1.2 :005 > loop do
2.1.2 :006 >     a1,a2=enum.next,enum2.next
2.1.2 :007?>   puts "array 1 #{a1} array 2 #{a2}"
2.1.2 :008?>   end
array 1 1 array 2 5
array 1 2 array 2 6
array 1 4 array 2 7

Enumerators are more powerful than the examples used above, because they allow infinite series, parallel iteration, among other techniques.

2
  • 1
    Is there a way to get the index inside the loop shown above?
    – Biju
    Dec 25, 2018 at 10:38
  • @Biju, you can write e1 = [1,2,4].each_with_index and e2 = [5,6,7].each_with_index. Then e1.next #=> [1, 0]; e1.next #=> [2, 1]; e1.next #=> [4, 2]; e1.next #=> StopIteration: iteration reached an end (exception). Similar for e2. Feb 1, 2022 at 1:28
17

Related to the original question, for iterating over arrays of unequal length where you want the values to cycle around you can use

[1,2,3,4,5,6].zip([7,8,9].cycle)

and Ruby will give you

[[1, 7], [2, 8], [3, 9], [4, 7], [5, 8], [6, 9]]

This saves you from the nil values that you'll get from just using zip

0
16

In addition to a.zip(b).each{|x,y| } as others have said, you can also say [a,b].transpose.each{|x,y| }, which strikes me as a tiny bit more symmetrical. Probably not as fast, though, since you're creating the extra [a,b] array.

1
  • 11
    +1 One of the nice things about transpose is it raises an exception if the two arrays aren't the same length. Jan 13, 2013 at 21:56
7

Simply zipping the two arrays together works well if you are dealing with arrays. But what if you are dealing with never-ending enumerators, such as something like these:

enum1 = (1..5).cycle
enum2 = (10..12).cycle

enum1.zip(enum2) fails because zip tries to evaluate all the elements and combine them. Instead, do this:

enum1.lazy.zip(enum2)

That one lazy saves you by making the resulting enumerator lazy-evaluate.

1
  • This is also useful if you want to are using arrays but want to keep the memory footprint low.
    – ggorlen
    Oct 12, 2022 at 1:42
3

How about compromising, and using #each_with_index?

include Enumerable 

@budget = [ 100, 150, 25, 105 ]
@actual = [ 120, 100, 50, 100 ]

@budget.each_with_index { |val, i| puts val; puts @actual[i] }
0

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