6

Right now, I have a server call kicking back the following Ruby hash:

{
  "id"=>"-ct",
  "factualId"=>"",
  "outOfBusiness"=>false,
  "publishedAt"=>"2012-03-09 11:02:01",
  "general"=>{
    "name"=>"A Cote",
    "timeZone"=>"EST",
    "desc"=>"À Côté is a small-plates restaurant in Oakland's charming
            Rockridge district. Cozy tables surround large communal tables in both
            the main dining room and on the sunny patio to create a festive atmosphere.
              Small plates reflecting the best of seasonal Mediterranean cuisine are served
            family-style by a friendly and knowledgeable staff.\nMenu items are paired with
            a carefully chosen selection of over 40 wines by the glass as well as a highly
            diverse bottled wine menu. Specialty drinks featuring fresh fruits, rare
            botaniques and fine liqueurs are featured at the bar.",
    "website"=>"http://acoterestaurant.com/"
  },
  "location"=>{
    "address1"=>"5478 College Ave",
    "address2"=>"",
    "city"=>"Oakland",
    "region"=>"CA",
    "country"=>"US",
    "postcode"=>"94618",
    "longitude"=>37.84235,
    "latitude"=>-122.25222
  },
  "phones"=>{
    "main"=>"510-655-6469",
    "fax"=>nil
  },
  "hours"=>{
    "mon"=>{"start"=>"", "end"=>""},
    "tue"=>{"start"=>"", "end"=>""},
    "wed"=>{"start"=>"", "end"=>""},
    "thu"=>{"start"=>"", "end"=>""},
    "fri"=>{"start"=>"", "end"=>""},
    "sat"=>{"start"=>"", "end"=>""},
    "sun"=>{"start"=>"", "end"=>""},
    "holidaySchedule"=>""
  },
  "businessType"=>"Restaurant"
}

It's got several attributes which are nested, such as:

"wed"=>{"start"=>"", "end"=>""}

I need to convert this object into a unnested hash in Ruby. Ideally, I'd like to detect if an attribute is nested, and respond accordingly, I.E. when it determines the attribute 'wed' is nested, it pulls out its data and stores in the fields 'wed-start' and 'wed-end', or something similar.

Anyone have any tips on how to get started?

3
  • A little confused about your use of 'JSON' here. What you are showing is a ruby hash, not a JSON object. Do you need to flatten that hash, then convert back to JSON? Or, do you simply need to take that ruby hash and flatten it? Aug 22, 2012 at 0:05
  • Yeah, turns out it actually was a ruby object. How do I flatten it? Aug 22, 2012 at 0:13
  • 3
    There is a hash method called, flatten, but I don't think that's what your looking for. It flattens a hash into an array. I'm curious what your use case is. It generally makes more sense to keep nesting, imho. Its much easier to dynamically retrieve values like this hash[var][var2] than it is to try and concatenate keys on the fly, like hash[var + "-" +var2] It's way less readable and doesn't really gain much. Aug 22, 2012 at 0:18

4 Answers 4

10

EDIT: the sparsify gem was released as a general solution to this problem.


Here's an implementation I worked up a couple months ago. You'll need to parse the JSON into a hash, then use Sparsify to sparse the hash.

# Extend into a hash to provide sparse and unsparse methods. 
# 
# {'foo'=>{'bar'=>'bingo'}}.sparse #=> {'foo.bar'=>'bingo'}
# {'foo.bar'=>'bingo'}.unsparse => {'foo'=>{'bar'=>'bingo'}}
# 
module Sparsify
  def sparse(options={})
    self.map do |k,v|
      prefix = (options.fetch(:prefix,[])+[k])
      next Sparsify::sparse( v, options.merge(:prefix => prefix ) ) if v.is_a? Hash
      { prefix.join(options.fetch( :separator, '.') ) => v}
    end.reduce(:merge) || Hash.new
  end
  def sparse!
    self.replace(sparse)
  end

  def unsparse(options={})
    ret = Hash.new
    sparse.each do |k,v|
      current = ret
      key = k.to_s.split( options.fetch( :separator, '.') )
      current = (current[key.shift] ||= Hash.new) until (key.size<=1)
      current[key.first] = v
    end
    return ret
  end
  def unsparse!(options={})
    self.replace(unsparse)
  end

  def self.sparse(hsh,options={})
    hsh.dup.extend(self).sparse(options)
  end

  def self.unsparse(hsh,options={})
    hsh.dup.extend(self).unsparse(options)
  end

  def self.extended(base)
    raise ArgumentError, "<#{base.inspect}> must be a Hash" unless base.is_a? Hash
  end
end

usage:

external_data = JSON.decode( external_json )
flattened = Sparsify.sparse( external_data, :separator => '-' )

This was originally created because we were working with storing a set of things in Mongo, which allowed us to use sparse keys (dot-separated) on updates to update some contents of a nested hash without overwriting unrelated keys.

1
  • 2
    If there is interest, I will gladly gemify and maintain, along with tests. Aug 22, 2012 at 0:28
6

Here's a first cut at a complete solution. I'm sure you can write it more elegantly, but this seems fairly clear. If you save this in a Ruby file and run it, you'll get the output I show below.

class Hash
  def unnest
    new_hash = {}
    each do |key,val|
      if val.is_a?(Hash)
        new_hash.merge!(val.prefix_keys("#{key}-"))
      else
        new_hash[key] = val
      end
    end
    new_hash
  end

  def prefix_keys(prefix)
    Hash[map{|key,val| [prefix + key, val]}].unnest
  end
end

p ({"a" => 2, "f" => 5}).unnest
p ({"a" => {"b" => 3}, "f" => 5}).unnest
p ({"a" => {"b" => {"c" => 4}, "f" => 5}}).unnest

Output:

{"a"=>2, "f"=>5}
{"a-b"=>3, "f"=>5}
{"a-b-c"=>4, "a-f"=>5}
3
  • 1
    I am probably wrong, but this feels like an anti-pattern to me. It feels more icky trying to get at p[a-b-c] than it does p[a][b][c]. And it gets messy when you get more values in your hash. Aug 22, 2012 at 0:22
  • yep. I am not explicitly commenting on the appropriateness of a solution like this, just supplying code for if people want it :)
    – Peter
    Aug 22, 2012 at 0:23
  • @Joeyjoejoejr one example where this might be used is if you are stuffing a nested hash into an api or datastore that can't handle the nesting. It's not as easy to work with but sometimes your only choice. Jan 3, 2013 at 23:14
4

One more option:

class Hash
  def smash(prefix = nil)
    inject({}) do |acc, (k, v)|
      key = prefix.to_s + k
      if Hash === v
        acc.merge(v.smash(key + '-'))
      else
        acc.merge(key => v)
      end
    end
  end
end

hash = {
  'f' => 100,
  'z' => {'j' => 25},
  'a' => {'b' => {'c' => 1}}
}

puts hash.smash # => {"f"=>100, "z-j"=>25, "a-b-c"=>1}
2

Another way to tackle this is not to flatten the hash, but to access it as though it were flattened. For example, given this hash:

h = {
  'a' => 1,
  'b' => {
    'c' => 2,
    'd' => 3,
  },
}

then this function:

NESTED_KEY_SEPARATOR = '-'
NESTED_KEY_REGEX = /^(.*?)(?:#{NESTED_KEY_SEPARATOR}(.*))?$/

def nested_fetch(key, hash)
  return hash if key.empty?
  first_part_of_key, rest_of_key = NESTED_KEY_REGEX.match(key).captures
  value = hash[first_part_of_key]
  if value.is_a?(Hash)
    nested_hash_fetch(value, rest_of_key || '')
  elsif rest_of_key
    nil
  else
    value
  end
end

Will let you retrieve nested hash elements by concatenating the individual hash keys together with KEY_SEPARATOR (set to dash here, but could be any character that never appears as a key in the hash you need to search):

p nested_fetch('a', h)      # => 1
p nested_fetch('b-c', h)    # => 2

If you give a partially qualified key, you get the hash that matched at that point:

p nested_fetch('b', h)      # => {"c"=>2, "d"=>3}

And if you give a key that doesn't exist, you get nil:

p nested_fetch('b-x', h)    # => nil

This could be monkey-patched onto Hash, if desired, by simply enclosing the above code in class Hash, and by giving self as the default to argument hash:

class Hash
  NESTED_KEY_SEPARATOR = '-'
  NESTED_KEY_REGEX = /^(.*?)(?:#{KEY_SEPARATOR}(.*))?$/

  def nested_fetch(key, hash = self)
  ...
end

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