756

I want to check whether the "user" key is present or not in the session hash. How can I do this?

Note that I don't want to check whether the key's value is nil or not. I just want to check whether the "user" key is present.

0

8 Answers 8

1129

Hash's key? method tells you whether a given key is present or not.

session.key?("user")
3
  • nice: "string" accessor works for JSON.parse parsed objects, too :)
    – Bijan
    Aug 8, 2016 at 14:32
  • 3
    This doesn't work for me, the :user method worked instead Mar 22, 2017 at 20:10
  • if(session["user"]) also work, but not sure about the efficiency Oct 27, 2022 at 13:22
342

While Hash#has_key? gets the job done, as Matz notes here, it has been deprecated in favour of Hash#key?.

hash.key?(some_key)
3
56

Hash instance has a key? method:

{a: 1}.key?(:a)
=> true

Be sure to use the symbol key or a string key depending on what you have in your hash:

{'a' => 2}.key?(:a)
=> false
1
37

It is very late but preferably symbols should be used as key:

my_hash = {}
my_hash[:my_key] = 'value'

my_hash.has_key?("my_key")
 => false 
my_hash.has_key?("my_key".to_sym)
 => true 

my_hash2 = {}
my_hash2['my_key'] = 'value'

my_hash2.has_key?("my_key")
 => true 
my_hash2.has_key?("my_key".to_sym)
 => false 

But when creating hash if you pass string as key then it will search for the string in keys.

But when creating hash you pass symbol as key then has_key? will search the keys by using symbol.


If you are using Rails, you can use Hash#with_indifferent_access to avoid this; both hash[:my_key] and hash["my_key"] will point to the same record

2
  • 7
    If you are using Rails, you can use Hash#with_indifferent_access to avoid this; both :my_key and "my_key" will point to the same record Apr 6, 2016 at 14:07
  • This is the best answer especially when you are looking for a key coming from a variable, e.g., my_hash.has_key? my_key.to_sym :)
    – q9f
    Dec 16, 2021 at 18:44
9

Another way is here

hash = {one: 1, two: 2}

hash.member?(:one)
#=> true

hash.member?(:five)
#=> false
5

You can always use Hash#key? to check if the key is present in a hash or not.

If not it will return you false

hash =  { one: 1, two:2 }

hash.key?(:one)
#=> true

hash.key?(:four)
#=> false
4

In Rails 5, the has_key? method checks if key exists in hash. The syntax to use it is:

YourHash.has_key? :yourkey
0
h = {}
if h.respond_to?(:key?) && h.key?('text') #with respond_to method check if it's hash
   puts h['text'] 
end
1
  • Remember that Stack Overflow isn't just intended to solve the immediate problem, but also to help future readers find solutions to similar problems, which requires understanding the underlying code. This is especially important for members of our community who are beginners, and not familiar with the syntax. Given that, can you edit your answer to include an explanation of what you're doing and why you believe it is the best approach? Feb 3 at 0:18

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