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I've prepared a method which parses a log file and returns a hash as a result:

parse

  def parse
    file_exist?(file_path)
    @page_views = Hash.new { |k, v| k[v] = [] }

    File.open(file_path).each do |line|
      page, ip = line.split
      @page_views[page] << ip
    end
    @page_views
  end

result

=> {"/help/1"=>
  ["126.318.035.038",
   "929.398.951.889",
   "543.910.244.929",
   "929.398.951.889",
   "929.398.951.889",],
 "/about"=>
   ["929.398.951.889",
   "929.398.951.889",
   "543.910.244.929",]

How to sort such data to count IP addresses and displayed like below:

=> {"/help/1"=>
  ["126.318.035.038" => 1,
   "929.398.951.889" => 3,
   "543.910.244.929" => 1]
 "/about"=>
   ["929.398.951.889" => 2,
   "543.910.244.929" => 1]
2
  • Google "histogram".
    – matt
    Dec 15, 2020 at 11:55
  • Call tally on the IP arrays.
    – Stefan
    Dec 15, 2020 at 12:03

3 Answers 3

2

Use tally.

@page_views.update(@page_views) {|_, v| v.tally}
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  • I suggest @page_views.transform_values { |v| v.tally }, or transform_values! if (as in your answer) the hash is to be modified in place. Dec 19, 2020 at 0:34
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You can try with this

hash = {"/help/1"=>
  ["126.318.035.038",
   "929.398.951.889",
   "543.910.244.929",
   "929.398.951.889",
   "929.398.951.889",],
 "/about"=>
   ["929.398.951.889",
   "929.398.951.889",
   "543.910.244.929",]
}

array of hashes of ip address with count

hash.transform_values {|v| v.uniq.collect{ |e| [[e, v.count(e)]].to_h } }

=> {
    "/help/1"=>[{"126.318.035.038"=>1}, 
                {"929.398.951.889"=>3}, 
                {"543.910.244.929"=>1}], 
    "/about"=>[{"929.398.951.889"=>2}, 
               {"543.910.244.929"=>1}]
   }

hash of ip addresses with count

hash.transform_values {|v| v.uniq.collect{ |e| [e, v.count(e)] }.to_h }
=> {"/help/1"=>{
                 "126.318.035.038"=>1, 
                 "929.398.951.889"=>3, 
                 "543.910.244.929"=>1}, 
    "/about"=>{
                 "929.398.951.889"=>2, 
                 "543.910.244.929"=>1}
   }

use below code if you have newer ruby, i have tested this on 2.7

hash.transform_values(&:tally)

{"/help/1"=>{
              "126.318.035.038"=>1, 
              "929.398.951.889"=>3, 
              "543.910.244.929"=>1}, 
  "/about"=>{
              "929.398.951.889"=>2, 
              "543.910.244.929"=>1}
}
0

You can use IO::foreach with a hash to which is attached a default proc that contains a second default proc.

Code

def doit(file_name)
  IO.foreach(file_name).
     with_object(Hash.new { |h,k| h[k] = Hash.new(0) }) do |line,h|
       key, value = line.chomp.split
       h[key][value] += 1
     end
end

Example

First create a file for illustration.

file_name = 't'
str =<<~END
cat 1
cat 1
cat 1
cat 2
cat 2
dog 1
dog 2
dog 2
dog 3
dog 3
pig 1
pig 1
pig 1
pig 2
END

Randomize the lines of str:

str = str.lines.shuffle.join
  #=> "cat 1\ndog 1\npig 1\ndog 3\ncat 1\npig 1\ndog 2\ndog 2\npig 1\ncat 2\ndog 3\ncat 1\ncat 2\npig 2\n"
puts str
cat 1
dog 1
pig 1
dog 3
cat 1
pig 1
dog 2
dog 2
pig 1
cat 2
dog 3
cat 1
cat 2
pig 2

Create a file that contains an image of str:

File.write(file_name, str)
  #=> 84

Execute the method:

doit(file_name)
  #=> {"cat"=>{"1"=>3, "2"=>2},
  #    "dog"=>{"1"=>1, "3"=>2, "2"=>2},
  #    "pig"=>{"1"=>3, "2"=>1}}

Compare this with the original value of str above.

Notes

See IO::foreach and the form of Hash::new that employs a default proc.

Note that because

IO.foreach(file_name).
   with_object(Hash.new { |h,k| h[k] = Hash.new(0) })
  #=> #<Enumerator: #<Enumerator: IO:foreach("t")>:with_object({})>

is an enumerator, no intermediate hash (with pets as keys and arrays of strings representing non-negative integers as values) is produced, an advantage over methods that do so. Such an intermediate hash is required, for one, to use Enumerable#tally (introduced in Ruby v2.7).

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