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Let's say I have the following file in my working directory:

path/to/my/file/fileToBeReplaced.json

And I have a file at the following URL endpoint:

mywebsite.com/fileToCopy.json

I want to take the file at the URL endpoint (fileToCopy.json) and fetch the contents there to overwrite the file in my working directory (fileToBeReplaced.json). It's also important that I preserve the json formatting when writing the file to my working directory. How can this be accomplished within a Ruby script?

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1 Answer 1

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You can do something like this:

require 'net/http'

File.open("path/to/my/file/fileToBeReplaced.json", "w") do |f|
   f.write Net::HTTP.get('mywebsite.com', '/fileToCopy.json')
end

If your JSON from URL is not well formatted, then, you can try something like this:

require 'net/http'
require 'json'

File.open("path/to/my/file/fileToBeReplaced.json", "w") do |f|
   json_str = Net::HTTP.get('mywebsite.com', '/fileToCopy.json')
   json_hash = JSON.parse(json_str)
   f.puts JSON.pretty_generate(json_hash)
end
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  • This works but doesn't preserve the json formatting. I've tried adding "to_json" to the end of the f.write line, but it just inserts /'s in place of white space.
    – cvoep28
    Aug 31, 2015 at 19:10
  • Hmm... I got the file with formatting preserved. Does your URL return JSON with formatting ? Updated my answer to show usage of JSON#pretty_generate
    – Wand Maker
    Aug 31, 2015 at 19:11
  • 1
    It looks like I was using Ruby 1.8 for this. The hash function is undefined in 1.8, but is insertion order for 1.9, so upgrading fixed this issue.
    – cvoep28
    Sep 3, 2015 at 20:12

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