How can this be achieved in Ruby? Can it be done without repeating the variable? Javascript:
b = a || 7
This assigns a
if a
is not 0
and 7
otherwise
One specific case is converting date.wday to 7 if it returns 0 (Sunday).
Just out of curiosity:
class Object
def javascript_or?(other)
(is_a?(FalseClass) || nil? || '' == self || 0 == self) ? nil : self
end
end
and:
a = b.javascript_or?(7)
case self
which might be faster than this chain of ||
operators.
There are only two falsy values in Ruby: nil
and false
. So, if you really want this approach
a = b == 0 ? 7 : b
is a plausible solution, because 0
can't be evaluated as false
.
However, a better option for your need is cwday
, and not wday
. Then you don't need to make this comparison anymore, because it returns 1
for Monday, 2
for Tuesday, and finally 7
for Sunday, as you need.
date = Date.new(2016,19,6) # => Jun 19 2016, Sunday
date.cwday # => 7
For the particular case of 0
and 7
:
a = (b + 6) % 7 + 1
:)
You can use ternary operator:
date.wday == 0 ? 7 : date.wday
cwday
, I think this is a close second. I have no idea why it was downvoted, unless it was by the OP, who found it insulting.
Jun 22, 2016 at 17:11
What you're describing here is less of a logical problem and more of a mapping one:
WEEKDAY_MAP = Hash.new { |h,k| h[k] = k < 7 ? k : nil }.merge(0 => 7)
This one re-writes 1..6 to be the same, but 0 becomes 7. All other values are nil
.
Then you can use this to re-write your day indicies:
b = WEEKDAY_MAP[a]
If at some point you want to tinker with the logic some more, that's also possible.
|| 7
is never going to happen so you may as well abandon that idea: The When in Rome principle applies here. If you're doing a mapping operation, express it as such. In other languages you can take advantage of zero being a false value so the simplest expression of your desire does vary considerably depending on constraints.
[date.wday, 7].detect { i != 0 }
cwday
(instead ofwday
) – it returns7
(instead of0
) if the date is a Sunday ;-)wday
or not?cwday
solved my case.