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What's the best way to truncate a string to the first n words?

1
  • Are you using just Ruby, or Ruby on Rails? Jun 5, 2011 at 3:50

4 Answers 4

41
n = 3
str = "your long    long   input string or whatever"
str.split[0...n].join(' ')
 => "your long long"


str.split[0...n] # note that there are three dots, which excludes n
 => ["your", "long", "long"]
6
  • 24
    str.split(/\s+/, n+1)[0...n].join(' ') will improve performance.
    – sawa
    Jun 4, 2011 at 10:11
  • 1
    this will get the first 4 words, not 3.
    – Zack Xu
    May 15, 2014 at 17:14
  • 3
    @ZackXu Make sure you use the ... range literal, not the .. one. Three dots excludes the nth value.
    – user513951
    May 15, 2014 at 17:19
  • 1
    What about: truncate(my_string, :length => 300, :separator => ' ') 300 being the number of characters. You won't be able to choose the number of words but that's not so bad!
    – Nima Izadi
    Jul 23, 2014 at 8:28
  • 1
    shouldn't it be my_string.truncate(300, separator: ' ')? apidock.com/rails/String/truncate
    – Yo Ludke
    Jul 3, 2015 at 12:57
9

You could do it like this:

s     = "what's the best way to truncate a ruby string to the first n words?"
n     = 6
trunc = s[/(\S+\s+){#{n}}/].strip

if you don't mind making a copy.

You could also apply Sawa's Improvement (wish I was still a mathematician, that would be a great name for a theorem) by adjusting the whitespace detection:

trunc = s[/(\s*\S+){#{n}}/]

If you have to deal with an n that is greater than the number of words in s then you could use this variant:

s[/(\S+(\s+)?){,#{n}}/].strip
3
  • 4
    An improvement: trunc = s[/(\s*\S+){#{n}}/]. You don't need strip.
    – sawa
    Jun 4, 2011 at 9:43
  • 1
    @sawa: You could put that (and your version of the split approach) down as an answer, improvements and clarifications of existing answers are worthwhile. Jun 4, 2011 at 18:06
  • 1
    @GiangNguyen: In that case you could use s[/(\S+(\s+)?){,#{n}}/].strip. Oct 31, 2013 at 19:10
4

You can use str.split.first(n).join(' ') with n being any number.

Contiguous white spaces in the original string are replaced with a single white space in the returned string.

For example, try this in irb:

>> a='apple    orange pear banana   pineaple  grapes'
=> "apple    orange pear banana   pineaple  grapes"
>> b=a.split.first(2).join(' ')
=> "apple orange"

This syntax is very clear (as it doesn't use regular expression, array slice by index). If you program in Ruby, you know that clarity is an important stylistic choice.

A shorthand for join is * So this syntax str.split.first(n) * ' ' is equivalent and shorter (more idiomatic, less clear for the uninitiated).

You can also use take instead of first so the following would do the same thing

a.split.take(2) * ' '
4

This could be following if it's from rails 4.2 (which has truncate_words)

string_given.squish.truncate_words(number_given, omission: "")

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