Is there a way to get each element of an array, as well the index of
that element? Something like
a = %w[foo bar]
a.each { |val, index| .... } # val => 'foo', index => 0
If there's no way to do that, is it better to use each_index and then
access the array?
a.each_index do |i|
puts i
puts a[i]
end
vs finding the index after you have the element
a.each do |val|
puts a.index(val)
puts val
end
Intuitively I'd think the second way may be a bit slower than the
first, because it has to search through the array for the element,
rather than accessing the index directly. Maybe not though...I'd just
like a bit of explanation on this.
Thanks,
Pat
Perfect, thanks
Is this using some idiom (e.g. attaching _with_index) that I don't
know about? I didn't see that method in the Array rdoc.
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On 1/20/06, James Edward Gray II <james@grayproductions.net> wrote:
On Jan 20, 2006, at 8:08 AM, Pat Maddox wrote:
> Is there a way to get each element of an array, as well the index of
> that element?
You bet.
> Something like
> a = %w[foo bar]
> a.each { |val, index| .... } # val => 'foo', index => 0
a.each_with_index ...
James Edward Gray II
If you do a ``ri Array'' you will see that #each_with_index is mixed in from Enumerable. see Enumerable#each_with_index for more information.
-- Daniel
···
On Jan 20, 2006, at 4:06 PM, Pat Maddox wrote:
Is this using some idiom (e.g. attaching _with_index) that I don't
know about? I didn't see that method in the Array rdoc.