30

I want to "zip" two arrays into a Hash.

From:

['BO','BR']
['BOLIVIA','BRAZIL']

To:

{BO: 'BOLIVIA', BR:'BRAZIL'}

How can I do it?

3
  • 1
    Your resulting hash isn't valid syntax. Did you mean {'BO': 'BOLIVIA', 'BR':'BRAZIL'}?
    – lurker
    Apr 16, 2014 at 15:38
  • 2
    @lurker: The resulting hash is valid syntax, yours isn't. In a new style hash literal, the keys need to be Symbols which are valid Ruby identifiers. 'BO' is not a legal identifier (apostrophes are not allowed in an identifier). Apr 16, 2014 at 21:08
  • 1
    Both are actually valid syntax, but if I "zipped" two arrays I'd expect the result to match the source. Feb 5, 2019 at 0:05

5 Answers 5

52

I would do it this way:

keys = ['BO','BR']
values = ['BOLIVIA','BRAZIL']

Hash[keys.zip(values)]
# => {"BO"=>"BOLIVIA", "BR"=>"BRAZIL"}

If you want symbols for keys, then:

Hash[keys.map(&:to_sym).zip(values)]
# => {:BO=>"BOLIVIA", :BR=>"BRAZIL"}

In Ruby 2.1.0 or higher, you could write these as:

keys.zip(values).to_h
keys.map(&:to_sym).zip(values).to_h

As of Ruby 2.5 you can use .transform_keys:

Hash[keys.zip(values)].transform_keys { |k| k.to_sym }
2
  • 1
    Biiig +1 for to_h. I'm not using 2.1.0 yet, but to_h is finally sane way to convert array of pairs to hash. Hash#[] method was really clunky and didn't have that Ruby feel of doing things.
    – samuil
    Apr 17, 2014 at 5:58
  • 1
    You can now use transform_keys(&:to_sym) to convert to symbol keys.
    – Kris
    Sep 12, 2019 at 9:20
6

Just use the single Array of the twos, and then transpose it, and generate Hash:

keys = ['BO','BR']
values = ['BOLIVIA','BRAZIL']
Hash[[keys,values].transpose]
# => {"BO"=>"BOLIVIA", "BR"=>"BRAZIL"}

or for newer ruby version:

[keys,values].transpose.to_h
3
  • There is a reason to prefer [keys, values].transpose over keys.zip(values)?
    – toro2k
    Apr 16, 2014 at 15:40
  • 5
    out of interest, why was this downvoted? seems like a valid method to me, it may run slow for larger lists but works fine.
    – Mike H-R
    Apr 16, 2014 at 15:48
  • @toro2k that is graphically =) Apr 16, 2014 at 15:49
5

Ironically, if you just sprinkle some dots and underscores into your question, it just works:

I want to "zip" two arrays into_hash

ary1.zip(ary2).to_h
# => { 'BO' => 'BOLIVIA', 'BR' => 'BRAZIL' }

Actually, you specified in your output hash that the keys should be Symbols not Strings, so we need to convert them first:

ary1.map(&:to_sym).zip(ary2).to_h
# => { BO: 'BOLIVIA', BR: 'BRAZIL' }
3

Quite readable version would be:

keys = ['BO','BR']
values = ['BOLIVIA','BRAZIL']

keys.zip(values).each_with_object({}) do |(key, value), hash|
  hash[key.to_sym] = value
end
0
0

You can make a zipped array and then convert the array into hash like so :

keys = ['BO','BR']
values = ['BOLIVIA','BRAZIL']    
array = key.zip(values) # => [['BO','BOLIVIA'],['BR','BRAZIL']]
hash = array.to_h # => {'BO' => 'BOLIVIA','BR' => 'BRAZIL'}

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