iterating over each character of a String in ruby 1.8.6 (each_char)
I am new to ruby and currently trying to operate on each character separately from a base String in ruby. I am using ruby 1.8.6 and would like to do something like:
"ABCDEFG".each_char do |i|
puts i
end
This produces a undefined method `each_char' error.
I was expecting to see a vertical output of:
A
B
C
D
..etc
Is the each_char
method defined only for 1.9? I tried using the plain each
method, but the block simply ouputs the entire string in one line. The only way I figure how to do this, which is rather inconvenient is to create an array of characters from the begining:
['A','B','C','D','...'].each do|i|
puts i
end
This outputs the desired:
A
B
C
..etc
Is there perhaps a way to achive this output using an unmodified string to begin with?
I think the Java equivalent is:
for (int i = 0; i < aString.length(); i++){
char currentChar = aString.charAt(i);
System.out.println(currentChar);
}
Solution 1:
I have the same problem. I usually resort to String#split
:
"ABCDEFG".split("").each do |i|
puts i
end
I guess you could also implement it yourself like this:
class String
def each_char
self.split("").each { |i| yield i }
end
end
Edit: yet another alternative is String#each_byte
, available in Ruby 1.8.6, which returns the ASCII value of each char in an ASCII string:
"ABCDEFG".each_byte do |i|
puts i.chr # Fixnum#chr converts any number to the ASCII char it represents
end
Solution 2:
Extending la_f0ka's comment, esp. if you also need the index position in your code, you should be able to do
s = 'ABCDEFG'
for pos in 0...s.length
puts s[pos].chr
end
The .chr
is important as Ruby < 1.9 returns the code of the character at that position instead of a substring of one character at that position.
Solution 3:
"ABCDEFG".chars.each do |char|
puts char
end
also
"ABCDEFG".each_char {|char| p char}
Ruby version >2.5.1