104

In Rails, you can do hash.try(:[], :key) which helps if hash is potentially nil. Is there an equivalent version for using the new Ruby 2.3 safe navigation operator &. with []?

1

5 Answers 5

131

&. is not equivalent to Rails' try, but you can use &. for hashes. Just use it, nothing special.

hash[:key1]&.[](:key2)&.[](:key3)

Although I would not do that.

4
  • 5
    Good point with &. and try being different. I was only thinking in the case of hash being nil. What I ended up using was hash&.[](:key) Mar 10, 2016 at 17:51
  • @bbozo Yes. &. was introduced in Ruby 2.3.
    – sawa
    Mar 10, 2016 at 18:04
  • 84
    hash&.dig(:key1, :key2, :key3) looks nicer :)
    – Urkle
    Jul 18, 2018 at 21:15
  • In which way they are not equivalent and why would you not do that?
    – pmrotule
    Nov 8 at 15:39
92

Ruby 2.3 and later

There's Hash#dig method now that does just that:

Retrieves the value object corresponding to the each key objects repeatedly.

h = { foo: {bar: {baz: 1}}}

h.dig(:foo, :bar, :baz)           #=> 1
h.dig(:foo, :zot)                 #=> nil

http://ruby-doc.org/core-2.3.0_preview1/Hash.html#method-i-dig

Pre Ruby 2.3

I usually had something like this put into my intializer:

Class Hash
    def deep_fetch *args
      x = self
      args.each do |arg|
        x = x[arg]
        return nil if x.nil?
      end
      x
    end
end

and then

response.deep_fetch 'PaReqCreationResponse', 'ThreeDSecureVERes', 'Message', 'VERes', 'CH', 'enrolled'

in one wacky case.

The general consensus in the community seems to be to avoid both try and the lonely operator &.

7
  • 2
    Looks suspiciously similar in use cases to dig, introduced in 2.3 just as &.. Any differences?
    – D-side
    Mar 10, 2016 at 19:35
  • 1
    It is better to place your extensions to Hash in a module and prepend it instead of doing a direct monkeypatch.
    – David S.
    May 12, 2017 at 18:31
  • @DavidS. can you elaborate?
    – bbozo
    May 15, 2017 at 8:46
  • Placing your extensions in a module allows you to test them in isolation from the actual class you're patching, and then actually patching it via Module#prepend will give you the ability to invoke super from your monkeypatch to call the method that you are overriding.
    – David S.
    May 15, 2017 at 13:58
  • 5
    but h.dig(:foo, :bar, :baz, :bing) will raise an error Mar 24, 2020 at 16:58
16

While hash&.[](:key) is elegant to the trained rubyist, I'd just use hash && hash[:key] as it reads better and more intuitively for the programmer coming after me, who may not be as familiar with the intricacies of ruby. Some extra characters in the codebase can sometimes save a whole lot of googling for someone else.

(Given the context you want to use this in is in a conditional statement, of course.)

1
  • 2
    ...especially as this syntax (&.[](:key)) is anything but well searchable! dig on the other hand can be identified as a method by the way it is used; and it's therefore relatively easy to get further infos on it by searching ruby method dig, e.g.
    – einjohn
    Feb 27, 2020 at 17:05
14

A rather more legible way to use the safe navigation operator than using hash&.[](:slug) is to use the fetch method:

hash&.fetch(:slug)

If your key may not be defined, you can use the second argument as a default:

hash&.fetch(:slug, nil)
2
  • This may be appropriate in some scenarios, but it's worth nothing that #[] and #fetch are not the same method, and fetch will throw an exception if the key does not exist in the hash.
    – ZoFreX
    Oct 3, 2020 at 9:46
  • 2
    @ZoFreX: That's why I included fetch(…, nil) in the answer, which is exactly the same as #[].
    – Sunny
    Oct 8, 2020 at 19:07
11

Accepted answer will not account for when hash is nil...

You can rewrite what you have using the safe nav operator before the .try and that will work

hash&.try(:[], :key)

but you can also use:

http://ruby-doc.org/core-2.3.0_preview1/Hash.html#method-i-dig

A way you could do this on a hash is by doing...

hash&.dig(:key1, :key2 ...)

which will return nil if any key fetch isn't present.

{ key1: { key2: 'info' } } 

would return 'info'

{ key1: { wrong_key: 'info' } } 

would return nil

1
  • 1
    This is the way to do it cleanly. hash&.dig( :key1 ). Thank you. Feb 23, 2022 at 22:39

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