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* doc/syntax/methods.rdoc: Added Array Decomposition.
git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@38872 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
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Fri Jan 18 14:11:01 2013 Eric Hodel <drbrain@segment7.net>
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* doc/syntax/methods.rdoc: Added Array Decomposition.
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Fri Jan 18 12:54:21 2013 Nobuyoshi Nakada <nobu@ruby-lang.org>
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* tool/rbinstall.rb (gem): Gem.ensure_gem_subdirectories makes
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@ -237,6 +237,67 @@ This will raise a SyntaxError:
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a + b + c
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end
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=== Array Decomposition
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You can decompose (unpack or extract values from) an Array using extra
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parentheses in the arguments:
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def my_method((a, b))
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p a: a, b: b
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end
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my_method([1, 2])
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This prints:
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{:a=>1, :b=>2}
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If the argument has extra elements in the Array they will be ignored:
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def my_method((a, b))
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p a: a, b: b
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end
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my_method([1, 2, 3])
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This has the same output as above.
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You can use a <code>*</code> to collect the remaining arguments. This splits
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an Array into a first element and the rest:
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def my_method((a, *b))
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p a: a, b: b
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end
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my_method([1, 2, 3])
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This prints:
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{:a=>1, :b=>[2, 3]}
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The argument will be decomposed if it responds to #to_ary. You should only
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define #to_ary if you can use your object in place of an Array.
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Use of the inner parentheses only uses one of the sent arguments. If the
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argument is not an Array it will be assigned to the first argument in the
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decomposition and the remaining arguments in the decomposition will be +nil+:
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def my_method(a, (b, c), d)
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p a: a, b: b, c: c, d: d
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end
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my_method(1, 2, 3)
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This prints:
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{:a=>1, :b=>2, :c=>nil, :d=>3}
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You can nest decomposition arbitrarily:
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def my_method(((a, b), c))
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# ...
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end
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=== Array/Hash Argument
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Prefixing an argument with <code>*</code> causes any remaining arguments to be
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