Edit: I see @bjhaid suggested pretty much the same solution as mine in a comment well before I posted this. I'll leave my answer up for the explanation I've provided.
Now that your question has been answered, let me suggest a way to change your code to make it more Ruby-like:
class String
def alt_case
split.map { |w| w.chars.map.with_index{ |s,i|
i.even? ? s.upcase : s.downcase }.join }.join(' ')
end
end
"My name is ballouta!".alt_case #=> "My NaMe Is BaLlOuTa!"
Here's how this works:
self #=> "My name is ballouta!" (default receiver)
a = self.split #=> ["My", "name", "is", "ballouta!"]
b = a.map { |w| w.chars.map.with_index{ |s,i|
i.even? ? s.upcase : s.downcase }.join }
#=> ["My", "NaMe", "Is", "BaLlOuTa!"]
b.join(' ') #=> "My NaMe Is BaLlOuTa!"
When computing b
, consider the case when w => "name"
:
c = w.chars #=> ["n", "a", "m", "e"]
d = c.map.with_index{ |s,i| i.even? ? s.upcase : s.downcase }
#=> ["N", "a", "M", "e"]
d.join #=> "NaMe"
I added this method to the String class only because that's what you've done, but in general I wouldn't recommend that; alt_case(string)
would be fine.
b.upcase!
andb.downcase!
, notb.upcase
andb.downcase
.class String
at the beginning andend
at the end. After adding the!
("bang") toupcase
anddowncase
your code will work, but it could be made more Ruby-like and improved quite a bit."My name is ballouta!".chars.map.with_index { |ch,i| i.even? ? ch.upcase : ch }.join # => "My nAmE Is bAlLoUtA!"
if whitespaces included in the alternation