In Ruby, how can I find a value in an array?
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124To everyone who complains about this sort of question: please read the FAQ: 'No question is too trivial or too "newbie"'. If you don't like the question, don't answer it, and let someone else do so. If the question has already been asked and answered on SO, then sure, mark it as a duplicate. But there's no reason to berate the newcomers for being new.– Brian CampbellDec 31, 2009 at 15:29
11 Answers
If you're trying to determine whether a certain value exists inside an array, you can use Array#include?(value):
a = [1,2,3,4,5]
a.include?(3) # => true
a.include?(9) # => false
If you mean something else, check the Ruby Array API
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2I would use Array#index, but checking the Ruby Array API is a great tip. Oct 15, 2016 at 0:21
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1
Using Array#select
will give you an array of elements that meet the criteria. But if you're looking for a way of getting the element out of the array that meets your criteria, Enumerable#detect
would be a better way to go:
array = [1,2,3]
found = array.select {|e| e == 3} #=> [3]
found = array.detect {|e| e == 3} #=> 3
Otherwise you'd have to do something awkward like:
found = array.select {|e| e == 3}.first
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2Thanks! I knew about
Enumerable#select
but#detect
is exactly what I was looking for. Feb 16, 2019 at 16:21 -
2
array.select{}
will go through all elements in the array looking those which match the condition.array.find
instead will return the first element that match the condition. So preferable usearray.find{ |e| e == 3 }
thenarray.select{ |e| e == 3 }.first
– oskrggNov 18, 2019 at 0:15 -
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2
If you want find one value from the Array, use Array#find
:
arr = [1,2,6,4,9]
arr.find {|e| e % 3 == 0} #=> 6
If you want to find multiple values from the Array, use Array#select
:
arr.select {|e| e % 3 == 0} #=> [ 6, 9 ]
e.include? 6 #=> true
To find if a value exists in an Array you can also use #in?
when using ActiveSupport. #in?
works for any object that responds to #include?
:
arr = [1, 6]
6.in? arr #=> true
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1I can't see any
Array#find
in the Ruby references. Must be a Rails thing since other people have mentioned it. Hmmm.... May 6, 2020 at 0:03 -
2@Ross Attrill No, It's in
Enumerable
, ruby-doc.org/core-2.7.1/Enumerable.html#method-i-find– FangxingMay 6, 2020 at 2:42 -
2I incorrectly assumed that ruby-doc shows included and inherited methods. Important lesson for me. May 6, 2020 at 21:39
Like this?
a = [ "a", "b", "c", "d", "e" ]
a[2] + a[0] + a[1] #=> "cab"
a[6] #=> nil
a[1, 2] #=> [ "b", "c" ]
a[1..3] #=> [ "b", "c", "d" ]
a[4..7] #=> [ "e" ]
a[6..10] #=> nil
a[-3, 3] #=> [ "c", "d", "e" ]
# special cases
a[5] #=> nil
a[5, 1] #=> []
a[5..10] #=> []
or like this?
a = [ "a", "b", "c" ]
a.index("b") #=> 1
a.index("z") #=> nil
Use:
myarray.index "valuetoFind"
That will return you the index of the element you want or nil if your array doesn't contain the value.
This answer is for everyone that realizes the accepted answer does not address the question as it currently written.
The question asks how to find a value in an array. The accepted answer shows how to check whether a value exists in an array.
There is already an example using index
, so I am providing an example using the select
method.
1.9.3-p327 :012 > x = [1,2,3,4,5]
=> [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
1.9.3-p327 :013 > x.select {|y| y == 1}
=> [1]
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@MarkThomas please quote the part of my answer that you're claiming is an incorrect statement and I'll gladly update it. I'm assuming we're using English here (not made up definitions for words). And when thousands of people search "ruby FIND value in array" in Google they are seeing this question as the first result, so I'm sure they would all love to actually get the correct answer.– Mike SApr 1, 2015 at 2:02
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1Furthermore, @MarkThomas if you were correct then this question should be closed for being duplicate of stackoverflow.com/questions/1986386/…, but there is a functional difference between "finding" and "checking for existence" in an array.– Mike SApr 1, 2015 at 2:27
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I'm allergic to folks resurrecting old questions and providing little to no more substance. This happens a lot. In your case, although
select
was already provided as an answer in 2009, you did provide a sample snippet which is a little better. So after rethinking it, I retract what I said earlier. Apr 1, 2015 at 15:32
I know this question has already been answered, but I came here looking for a way to filter elements in an Array based on some criteria. So here is my solution example: using select
, I find all constants in Class that start with "RUBY_"
Class.constants.select {|c| c.to_s =~ /^RUBY_/ }
UPDATE: In the meantime I have discovered that Array#grep works much better. For the above example,
Class.constants.grep /^RUBY_/
did the trick.
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1In the meantime I have discovered that Array#grep works much better. Even for the above example,
Class.constants.grep /^RUBY_/
did the trick. Jan 14, 2014 at 10:34
You can go for array methods.
To see all array methods use methods
function with array.
For Example,
a = ["name", "surname"]
a.methods
By the way you can use different method for checking value in array
You can use a.include?("name")
.
let arr = [
{ name:"string 1", value:"this", other: "that" },
{ name:"string 2", value:"this", other: "that" }
];
let h = arr.find(x => x.name == 'string 1') ?? arr[0]
console.log(h);
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2