How can I get the first character in a string using Ruby?
Ultimately what I'm doing is taking someone's last name and just creating an initial out of it.
So if the string was "Smith" I just want "S".
You can use Ruby's open classes to make your code much more readable. For instance, this:
class String
def initial
self[0,1]
end
end
will allow you to use the initial
method on any string. So if you have the following variables:
last_name = "Smith"
first_name = "John"
Then you can get the initials very cleanly and readably:
puts first_name.initial # prints J
puts last_name.initial # prints S
The other method mentioned here doesn't work on Ruby 1.8 (not that you should be using 1.8 anymore anyway!--but when this answer was posted it was still quite common):
puts 'Smith'[0] # prints 83
Of course, if you're not doing it on a regular basis, then defining the method might be overkill, and you could just do it directly:
puts last_name[0,1]
If you use a recent version of Ruby (1.9.0 or later), the following should work:
'Smith'[0] # => 'S'
If you use either 1.9.0+ or 1.8.7, the following should work:
'Smith'.chars.first # => 'S'
If you use a version older than 1.8.7, this should work:
'Smith'.split(//).first # => 'S'
Note that 'Smith'[0,1]
does not work on 1.8, it will not give you the first character, it will only give you the first byte.
"Smith"[0]
would return the integer value of the character 'S'. Both versions obey "Smith"[0,1] == "S"
.
"Smith"[0,1]
does work on 1.8 (assuming ASCII). Not sure why you assume so much about the requester, as well as about everybody else who would like to learn from that question. For example, Mac OS X comes bundled with Ruby 1.8, so no installation is required for these users.
Apr 28, 2010 at 17:11
"Smith"[0..0]
works in both ruby 1.8 and ruby 1.9.
For completeness sake, since Ruby 1.9 String#chr returns the first character of a string. Its still available in 2.0 and 2.1.
"Smith".chr #=> "S"
.first
, it does not require rails to work with a string.
In Rails
name = 'Smith'
name.first
>> s = 'Smith'
=> "Smith"
>> s[0]
=> "S"
"Smith"[0]
would return the integer value of the character 'S'. Both versions obey "Smith"[0,1] == "S"
.
"Smith"[0] == ?S
is true on both Ruby 1.8 and 1.9
Apr 28, 2010 at 15:35
Because of an annoying design choice in Ruby before 1.9 — some_string[0]
returns the character code of the first character — the most portable way to write this is some_string[0,1]
, which tells it to get a substring at index 0 that's 1 character long.
Try this:
def word(string, num)
string = 'Smith'
string[0..(num-1)]
end
If you're using Rails
You can also use truncate
> 'Smith'.truncate(1, omission: '')
#=> "S"
or for additional formatting:
> 'Smith'.truncate(4)
#=> "S..."
> 'Smith'.truncate(2, omission: '.')
#=> "S."
While this is definitely overkill for the original question, for a pure ruby
solution, here is how truncate
is implemented in rails
# File activesupport/lib/active_support/core_ext/string/filters.rb, line 66
def truncate(truncate_at, options = {})
return dup unless length > truncate_at
omission = options[:omission] || "..."
length_with_room_for_omission = truncate_at - omission.length
stop = if options[:separator]
rindex(options[:separator], length_with_room_for_omission) || length_with_room_for_omission
else
length_with_room_for_omission
end
"#{self[0, stop]}#{omission}"
end
truncate
Apr 21, 2021 at 16:25
Other way around would be using the chars for a string:
def abbrev_name
first_name.chars.first.capitalize + '.' + ' ' + last_name
end
Any of these methods will work:
name = 'Smith'
puts name.[0..0] # => S
puts name.[0] # => S
puts name.[0,1] # => S
puts name.[0].chr # => S
.
after name
. And the last one is non-sensical even if you remove the .
, because it's using two different methods to do the same thing – [0]
and chr()
.
Jan 8, 2018 at 17:07
'Smith'.first
"Smith".chr #=> "S"