A question - is there an object in Ruby analogous to a Java set, which
has hash-like functionality but no values?
Or should I just use a hash with no values?
Actually, what I'm _really_ trying to do is "unique-ize" an array based
on a particular attribute of each of it's members. My plan was to read
the unique attribute values into a hash as they come up and compare new
array member's attributes against that hash.
I bet there's a very cool way to do it
- if anyone knows and would
like to share, I am all ears.
Thanks,
Wes
路路路
--
Posted via http://www.ruby-forum.com/.
Wes Gamble wrote:
A question - is there an object in Ruby analogous to a Java set, which has hash-like functionality but no values?
require 'set' # should do what you're asking for
docs here: http://ruby-doc.org/stdlib/libdoc/set/rdoc/index.html
--Steve
Use the Set class (or SortedSet if your collection needs to be sorted and mixes in Comparable).
$ ri Set
<snip>
The equality of each couple of elements is determined according to
Object#eql? and Object#hash, since Set uses Hash as storage.
-- Daniel
路路路
On Mar 29, 2006, at 2:21 AM, Wes Gamble wrote:
Actually, what I'm _really_ trying to do is "unique-ize" an array based
on a particular attribute of each of it's members. My plan was to read
the unique attribute values into a hash as they come up and compare new
array member's attributes against that hash.
I bet there's a very cool way to do it
- if anyone knows and would
like to share, I am all ears.