The answer follows from the way "parallel assignment" is implemented in Ruby.
As you probably know:
a,b,c = 1,2,3
a #=> 1
b #=> 2
c #=> 3
a,b,c = [1,2,3]
a #=> 1
b #=> 2
c #=> 3
a,b = [1,2,3]
a #=> 1
b #=> 2
a,*b = [1,2,3]
a #=> 1
b #=> [2, 3]
*a,b = [1,2,3]
a #=> [1, 2]
b #=> 3
a,(b,c) = [1,[2,3]]
a #=> 1
b #=> 2
c #=> 3
a,(b,(c,d)) = [1,[2,[3,4]]]
a #=> 1
b #=> 2
c #=> 3
d #=> 4
The last two examples employ "disambiguation", which some people prefer to call "decomposition".
Now let's see how that applies to the assignment of values to block variables.
Suppose:
arr = [["studies", {:freq=>11, :cap_freq=>0, :value=>11}],
["theory", {:freq=>9, :cap_freq=>1, :value=>11}]]
and we execute:
arr.each { |a| p a }
["studies", {:freq=>11, :cap_freq=>0, :value=>11}]
["theory", {:freq=>9, :cap_freq=>1, :value=>11}]
Let's look at this more carefully. Define:
enum = arr.each
#=> #<Enumerator: [["studies", {:freq=>11, :cap_freq=>0, :value=>11}],
# ["theory", {:freq=>9, :cap_freq=>1, :value=>11}]]:each>
The first element is passed to the block and assigned to the block variable v
:
v = enum.next
#=> ["studies", {:freq=>11, :cap_freq=>0, :value=>11}]
We may be prefer to use parallel assignment with two block variables (after enum.rewind
to reset the enumerator):
a,h = enum.next
a #=> "studies"
h #=> {:freq=>11, :cap_freq=>0, :value=>11}
That allows us to write (for example):
arr.each { |a,h| p h }
{:freq=>11, :cap_freq=>0, :value=>11}
{:freq=>9, :cap_freq=>1, :value=>11}
Here we do not use the block variable a
. When that is the case, we might replace it with the local variable _
or possibly _a
:
arr.each { |_,h| p h }
arr.each { |_a,h| p h }
This draws attention to the fact that a
is not used and may help to avoid errors. Regarding errors, suppose we want:
[[1,2],[3,4]].map { |a,b| puts 1+b }
#=> [3,5]
but inadvertently write:
[[1,2],[3,4]].map { |a,b| puts a+b }
#=> [3,7]
which executes just fine (but produces an incorrect result). By contrast,
[[1,2],[3,4]].map { |_,b| puts a+b }
#NameError: undefined local variable or method 'a'
tells us there's a problem.
Here's a more elaborate example of what you can do in blocks with parallel assignment and disambiguation. Given:
h = { :a=>[1,2], :b=>[3,4] }
suppose we wish to obtain:
{ :a=>3, :b=>7 }
One way is the following:
h.each_with_object({}) { |(a,(b,c)),g| g[a] = b+c }
=> {:a=>3, :b=>7}
Hash#each
also only yields one item (that's the contract ofeach
, after all, it always yields exactly one item), an array with two items, exactly like in your case. Yet somehow, even though the two cases are identical you are confused by one and not the other.hash#each
seems to expect / yield two items: key and value (each {| key, value | block } → hsh
). That is not identical toeach { |item| block } → ary
, which only seems to yield one item. Of course, my lack of experience and knowledge as developer might be the reason for not understanding your point.