No, but you can append them in any order you like i.e.
array.uniq.compact
array.compact.uniq
As pointed out by phts, you can pass a block to uniq
but I don't see that being a very helpful alternative over uniq.compact
.
For better speed however, something like the following might help:
[].tap do |new_array|
hash = {}
original_array.each do |element|
next if element.nil? || !hash[element].nil?
new_array << (hash[element] = element)
end
end
Finally, if speed isn't an issue and you'll be frequently using this method, then you could create your own method:
class Array
def compact_uniq
self.compact.uniq
end
def compact_blank # in case you want to remove all 'blanks' as well
self.compact.reject(&:blank?)
end
end
@array.compact.uniq
should be more efficient.@array.uniq!
/@array.compact!
) to modify the array in-place should be more efficient.(a | a).compact
. :p