289

What's the (fastest/cleanest/straightforward) way to convert all keys in a hash from strings to symbols in Ruby?

This would be handy when parsing YAML.

my_hash = YAML.load_file('yml')

I'd like to be able to use:

my_hash[:key] 

Rather than:

my_hash['key']
3
  • dup? May 11, 2012 at 14:38
  • 91
    hash.symbolize_keys and hash.deep_symbolize_keys do the job if you're using Rails.
    – Zaz
    Aug 6, 2014 at 17:17
  • Josh if you would have put your comment into an answer, I would have voted you up. require 'rails';hash.deep_symbolize_keys works pretty well in irb or pry. :D Feb 7, 2015 at 10:17

31 Answers 31

349

In Ruby >= 2.5 (docs) you can use:

my_hash.transform_keys(&:to_sym)

Using older Ruby version? Here is a one-liner that will copy the hash into a new one with the keys symbolized:

my_hash = my_hash.inject({}){|memo,(k,v)| memo[k.to_sym] = v; memo}

With Rails you can use:

my_hash.symbolize_keys
my_hash.deep_symbolize_keys 
10
  • 5
    Ah, sorry for being unclear - inject doesn't modify the caller. You need to do my_hash = my_hash.inject({}){|memo,(k,v)| memo[k.to_sym] = v; memo}
    – Sarah Mei
    Apr 29, 2009 at 19:06
  • 4
    That's exactly what I was looking for. I modified it a bit and added some lines to even create symbols in nestled hashes. Have a look here, if you're interested: any-where.de/blog/ruby-hash-convert-string-keys-to-symbols
    – Matt
    Aug 19, 2009 at 14:57
  • 38
    In Ruby 1.9 you can use each_with_object like so: my_hash.each_with_object({}){|(k,v), h| h[k.to_sym] = v}
    – sgtFloyd
    Dec 28, 2011 at 23:41
  • 10
    this doesn't handle recursive hashes... Find for a one-off but not for DRY.
    – baash05
    Mar 26, 2013 at 2:21
  • 8
    @BryanM. I've come into this discussion very late :-) but you can also use the .tap method to remove the need to pass memo at the end. I've created a cleaned up version of all solutions (recursive ones as well) gist.github.com/Integralist/9503099 Mar 12, 2014 at 9:00
319

Here's a better method, if you're using Rails:

params.symbolize_keys

The end.

If you're not, just rip off their code (it's also in the link):

myhash.keys.each do |key|
  myhash[(key.to_sym rescue key) || key] = myhash.delete(key)
end
9
  • 6
    to_options is an alias for sybolize_keys.
    – ma11hew28
    Feb 9, 2011 at 2:13
  • 48
    Will not symbolize nested hashes.
    – oma
    Mar 2, 2011 at 12:08
  • 3
    I switched the link to symbolize_keys with the new & working (Rails 3) URL. I originally just fixed the URL for to_options, but there's zero documentation at that link. symbolize_keys actually has a description, so I used that instead. Oct 24, 2011 at 20:54
  • 23
    deep_symbolize_keys!. Works on rails 2+ Jul 25, 2013 at 19:34
  • 15
    For those curious how to do the reverse, hash.stringify_keys works.
    – Nick
    Aug 7, 2013 at 19:01
116

For the specific case of YAML in Ruby, if the keys begin with ':', they will be automatically interned as symbols.

require 'yaml'
require 'pp'
yaml_str = "
connections:
  - host: host1.example.com
    port: 10000
  - host: host2.example.com
    port: 20000
"
yaml_sym = "
:connections:
  - :host: host1.example.com
    :port: 10000
  - :host: host2.example.com
    :port: 20000
"
pp yaml_str = YAML.load(yaml_str)
puts yaml_str.keys.first.class
pp yaml_sym = YAML.load(yaml_sym)
puts yaml_sym.keys.first.class

Output:

#  /opt/ruby-1.8.6-p287/bin/ruby ~/test.rb
{"connections"=>
  [{"port"=>10000, "host"=>"host1.example.com"},
   {"port"=>20000, "host"=>"host2.example.com"}]}
String
{:connections=>
  [{:port=>10000, :host=>"host1.example.com"},
   {:port=>20000, :host=>"host2.example.com"}]}
Symbol
1
  • 17
    Sweet! Is there a way to set YAML#load_file to default all keys to symbols instead of strings w/o having to begin every key with a colon?
    – ma11hew28
    Feb 9, 2011 at 2:31
68

if you're using Rails, it is much simpler - you can use a HashWithIndifferentAccess and access the keys both as String and as Symbols:

my_hash.with_indifferent_access 

see also:

http://api.rubyonrails.org/classes/ActiveSupport/HashWithIndifferentAccess.html


Or you can use the awesome "Facets of Ruby" Gem, which contains a lot of extensions to Ruby Core and Standard Library classes.

  require 'facets'
  > {'some' => 'thing', 'foo' => 'bar'}.symbolize_keys
    =>  {:some=>"thing", :foo=>"bar}

see also: http://rubyworks.github.io/rubyfaux/?doc=http://rubyworks.github.io/facets/docs/facets-2.9.3/core.json#api-class-Hash

2
  • 2
    Actually that does the opposite. It converts from symbol to a string. To convert to a symbol use my_hash.symbolize_keys
    – Espen
    Jul 27, 2014 at 12:15
  • #symbolize_keys only works in Rails - not in plain Ruby / irb. Also note that #symbolize_keys does not work on deeply nested hashes.
    – Tilo
    Jul 27, 2014 at 17:11
65

Even more terse:

Hash[my_hash.map{|(k,v)| [k.to_sym,v]}]
3
  • 6
    This seems like the obvious choice. Jul 17, 2012 at 17:32
  • 12
    It doesn't symbolize nested hashes.
    – rgtk
    May 17, 2014 at 16:34
  • 15
    A more readable version: my_hash.map { |k, v| [k.to_sym, v] }.to_h
    – Dennis
    Apr 15, 2016 at 11:59
59

Since Ruby 2.5.0 you can use Hash#transform_keys or Hash#transform_keys!.

{'a' => 1, 'b' => 2}.transform_keys(&:to_sym) #=> {:a => 1, :b => 2}
3
  • Also works with transform_values apidock.com/rails/Hash/transform_values. That's really nice because there doesn't seem to be an equivalent for modifying values like there is with stringify_keys or symbolize_keys. Dec 13, 2018 at 20:47
  • is there a way to deep symbolize keys Jun 27, 2019 at 6:03
  • This should be the chosen solution after 2018.
    – Ivan Wang
    Dec 20, 2019 at 12:26
32

http://api.rubyonrails.org/classes/Hash.html#method-i-symbolize_keys

hash = { 'name' => 'Rob', 'age' => '28' }
hash.symbolize_keys
# => { name: "Rob", age: "28" }
0
31

If you are using json, and want to use it as a hash, in core Ruby you can do it:

json_obj = JSON.parse(json_str, symbolize_names: true)

symbolize_names: If set to true, returns symbols for the names (keys) in a JSON object. Otherwise strings are returned. Strings are the default.

Doc: Json#parse symbolize_names

1
  • symbol_hash = JSON.parse(JSON.generate(YAML.safe_load(FILENAME)), symbolize_names: true) is a pretty DRY (but inefficient) way to quickly get a hash with nested keys as symbols if coming from a YAML file. Jun 19, 2020 at 1:04
29

Here's a way to deep symbolize an object

def symbolize(obj)
    return obj.inject({}){|memo,(k,v)| memo[k.to_sym] =  symbolize(v); memo} if obj.is_a? Hash
    return obj.inject([]){|memo,v    | memo           << symbolize(v); memo} if obj.is_a? Array
    return obj
end
1
  • nice one, I'll go with this one even if I would rename it deep_symbolize :)
    – pierroz
    Apr 3, 2014 at 21:38
21

I really like the Mash gem.

you can do mash['key'], or mash[:key], or mash.key

2
14

A modification to @igorsales answer

class Object
  def deep_symbolize_keys
    return self.inject({}){|memo,(k,v)| memo[k.to_sym] = v.deep_symbolize_keys; memo} if self.is_a? Hash
    return self.inject([]){|memo,v    | memo           << v.deep_symbolize_keys; memo} if self.is_a? Array
    return self
  end
end
1
  • 1
    It would be helpful if you included why you were modifying the object for people scanning through answers.
    – Dbz
    Feb 22, 2019 at 0:18
13

params.symbolize_keys will also work. This method turns hash keys into symbols and returns a new hash.

1
  • 26
    That method is not core Ruby. It is a Rails method. Sep 10, 2011 at 14:10
13

In Rails you can use:

{'g'=> 'a', 2 => {'v' => 'b', 'x' => { 'z' => 'c'}}}.deep_symbolize_keys!

Converts to:

{:g=>"a", 2=>{:v=>"b", :x=>{:z=>"c"}}}
1
  • 3
    deep_symbolize_keys is added in Rails' Hash extension, but it's not part of Ruby core.
    – Ryenski
    Jan 26, 2018 at 2:07
8

So many answers here, but the one method rails function is hash.symbolize_keys

2
8

This is my one liner for nested hashes

def symbolize_keys(hash)
  hash.each_with_object({}) { |(k, v), h| h[k.to_sym] = v.is_a?(Hash) ? symbolize_keys(v) : v }
end
2
  • FYI, only works for Rails. In which case, HashWithIndifferentAccess may be a better alternative.
    – Adam Grant
    Jul 16, 2017 at 22:50
  • no it doesn't work only for rails. I works in plain ruby (irb) too. But it is only 2 levels deep. nested nested hashes don't get symbolized.
    – thiebo
    Nov 7, 2022 at 20:10
7

In case the reason you need to do this is because your data originally came from JSON, you could skip any of this parsing by just passing in the :symbolize_names option upon ingesting JSON.

No Rails required and works with Ruby >1.9

JSON.parse(my_json, :symbolize_names => true)
5

You could be lazy, and wrap it in a lambda:

my_hash = YAML.load_file('yml')
my_lamb = lambda { |key| my_hash[key.to_s] }

my_lamb[:a] == my_hash['a'] #=> true

But this would only work for reading from the hash - not writing.

To do that, you could use Hash#merge

my_hash = Hash.new { |h,k| h[k] = h[k.to_s] }.merge(YAML.load_file('yml'))

The init block will convert the keys one time on demand, though if you update the value for the string version of the key after accessing the symbol version, the symbol version won't be updated.

irb> x = { 'a' => 1, 'b' => 2 }
#=> {"a"=>1, "b"=>2}
irb> y = Hash.new { |h,k| h[k] = h[k.to_s] }.merge(x)
#=> {"a"=>1, "b"=>2}
irb> y[:a]  # the key :a doesn't exist for y, so the init block is called
#=> 1
irb> y
#=> {"a"=>1, :a=>1, "b"=>2}
irb> y[:a]  # the key :a now exists for y, so the init block is isn't called
#=> 1
irb> y['a'] = 3
#=> 3
irb> y
#=> {"a"=>3, :a=>1, "b"=>2}

You could also have the init block not update the hash, which would protect you from that kind of error, but you'd still be vulnerable to the opposite - updating the symbol version wouldn't update the string version:

irb> q = { 'c' => 4, 'd' => 5 }
#=> {"c"=>4, "d"=>5}
irb> r = Hash.new { |h,k| h[k.to_s] }.merge(q)
#=> {"c"=>4, "d"=>5}
irb> r[:c] # init block is called
#=> 4
irb> r
#=> {"c"=>4, "d"=>5}
irb> r[:c] # init block is called again, since this key still isn't in r
#=> 4
irb> r[:c] = 7
#=> 7
irb> r
#=> {:c=>7, "c"=>4, "d"=>5}

So the thing to be careful of with these is switching between the two key forms. Stick with one.

4

Would something like the following work?

new_hash = Hash.new
my_hash.each { |k, v| new_hash[k.to_sym] = v }

It'll copy the hash, but you won't care about that most of the time. There's probably a way to do it without copying all the data.

4

a shorter one-liner fwiw:

my_hash.inject({}){|h,(k,v)| h.merge({ k.to_sym => v}) }
3

How about this:

my_hash = HashWithIndifferentAccess.new(YAML.load_file('yml'))

# my_hash['key'] => "val"
# my_hash[:key]  => "val"
0
3

This is for people who uses mruby and do not have any symbolize_keys method defined:

class Hash
  def symbolize_keys!
    self.keys.each do |k|
      if self[k].is_a? Hash
        self[k].symbolize_keys!
      end
      if k.is_a? String
        raise RuntimeError, "Symbolizing key '#{k}' means overwrite some data (key :#{k} exists)" if self[k.to_sym]
        self[k.to_sym] = self[k]
        self.delete(k)
      end
    end
    return self
  end
end

The method:

  • symbolizes only keys that are String
  • if symbolize a string means to lose some informations (overwrite part of hash) raise a RuntimeError
  • symbolize also recursively contained hashes
  • return the symbolized hash
  • works in place!
1
  • 1
    There's a typo in your method, you forgot the ! in symbolize_keys. Otherwise works fine.
    – Ka Mok
    Sep 7, 2017 at 23:44
2

The array we want to change.

strings = ["HTML", "CSS", "JavaScript", "Python", "Ruby"]

Make a new variable as an empty array so we can ".push" the symbols in.

symbols = [ ]

Here's where we define a method with a block.

strings.each {|x| symbols.push(x.intern)}

End of code.

So this is probably the most straightforward way to convert strings to symbols in your array(s) in Ruby. Make an array of strings then make a new variable and set the variable to an empty array. Then select each element in the first array you created with the ".each" method. Then use a block code to ".push" all of the elements in your new array and use ".intern or .to_sym" to convert all the elements to symbols.

Symbols are faster because they save more memory within your code and you can only use them once. Symbols are most commonly used for keys in hash which is great. I'm the not the best ruby programmer but this form of code helped me a lot.If anyone knows a better way please share and you can use this method for hash too!

1
  • 2
    The question was regarding hashes, not arrays.
    – Richard_G
    Aug 22, 2016 at 12:02
2

If you would like vanilla ruby solution and as me do not have access to ActiveSupport here is deep symbolize solution (very similar to previous ones)

    def deep_convert(element)
      return element.collect { |e| deep_convert(e) } if element.is_a?(Array)
      return element.inject({}) { |sh,(k,v)| sh[k.to_sym] = deep_convert(v); sh } if element.is_a?(Hash)
      element
    end
2

Starting on Psych 3.0 you can add the symbolize_names: option

Psych.load("---\n foo: bar") # => {"foo"=>"bar"}

Psych.load("---\n foo: bar", symbolize_names: true) # => {:foo=>"bar"}

Note: if you have a lower Psych version than 3.0 symbolize_names: will be silently ignored.

My Ubuntu 18.04 includes it out of the box with ruby 2.5.1p57

1
ruby-1.9.2-p180 :001 > h = {'aaa' => 1, 'bbb' => 2}
 => {"aaa"=>1, "bbb"=>2} 
ruby-1.9.2-p180 :002 > Hash[h.map{|a| [a.first.to_sym, a.last]}]
 => {:aaa=>1, :bbb=>2}
1
  • You can wrap a in brackets to decompose the block argument to make this even more terse. See my answer for example. Apr 10, 2012 at 14:21
1

This is not exactly a one-liner, but it turns all string keys into symbols, also the nested ones:

def recursive_symbolize_keys(my_hash)
  case my_hash
  when Hash
    Hash[
      my_hash.map do |key, value|
        [ key.respond_to?(:to_sym) ? key.to_sym : key, recursive_symbolize_keys(value) ]
      end
    ]
  when Enumerable
    my_hash.map { |value| recursive_symbolize_keys(value) }
  else
    my_hash
  end
end
1

I like this one-liner, when I'm not using Rails, because then I don't have to make a second hash and hold two sets of data while I'm processing it:

my_hash = { "a" => 1, "b" => "string", "c" => true }

my_hash.keys.each { |key| my_hash[key.to_sym] = my_hash.delete(key) }

my_hash
=> {:a=>1, :b=>"string", :c=>true}

Hash#delete returns the value of the deleted key

1

Facets' Hash#deep_rekey is also a good option, especially:

  • if you find use for other sugar from facets in your project,
  • if you prefer code readability over cryptical one-liners.

Sample:

require 'facets/hash/deep_rekey'
my_hash = YAML.load_file('yml').deep_rekey
1

In ruby I find this to be the most simple and easy to understand way to turn string keys in hashes to symbols :

my_hash.keys.each { |key| my_hash[key.to_sym] = my_hash.delete(key)}

For each key in the hash we call delete on it which removes it from the hash (also delete returns the value associated with the key that was deleted) and we immediately set this equal to the symbolized key.

1

Similar to previous solutions but written a bit differently.

  • This allows for a hash that is nested and/or has arrays.
  • Get conversion of keys to a string as a bonus.
  • Code does not mutate the hash been passed in.

    module HashUtils
      def symbolize_keys(hash)
        transformer_function = ->(key) { key.to_sym }
        transform_keys(hash, transformer_function)
      end
    
      def stringify_keys(hash)
        transformer_function = ->(key) { key.to_s }
        transform_keys(hash, transformer_function)
      end
    
      def transform_keys(obj, transformer_function)
        case obj
        when Array
          obj.map{|value| transform_keys(value, transformer_function)}
        when Hash
          obj.each_with_object({}) do |(key, value), hash|
            hash[transformer_function.call(key)] = transform_keys(value, transformer_function)
          end
        else
          obj
        end
      end
    end
    

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