I extracted simple example:
require 'pp'
x = 1..3
pp x.map do |i| {:value => i, :double => (i*2)} end
pp x.map { |i| {:value => i, :double => (i*2)} }
pp(x.map do |i| {:value => i, :double => (i*2)} end)
pp(x.map { |i| {:value => i, :double => (i*2)} })
I am wondering why first pp produces:
[1, 2, 3]
While all the oders are giving:
[{:value=>1, :double=>2}, {:value=>2, :double=>4}, {:value=>3, :double=>6}]
I assume it has something to do with operator precedence. Where can I find good explanation?
eachworks with brackets but not withdo-end(ruby), Block definition - difference between braces anddo-end?, Ruby multiline block withoutdoend, Usingdoblock vs brackets{}and What is the difference or value of these block coding styles in Ruby?. – Jörg W Mittag Jul 28 '11 at 8:19