Automatic counter in Ruby for each?

I want to use a for-each and a counter:

i=0
for blah in blahs
    puts i.to_s + " " + blah
    i+=1
end

Is there a better way to do it?

Note: I don't know if blahs is an array or a hash, but having to do blahs[i] wouldn't make it much sexier. Also I'd like to know how to write i++ in Ruby.


Technically, Matt's and Squeegy's answer came in first, but I'm giving best answer to paradoja so spread around the points a bit on SO. Also his answer had the note about versions, which is still relevant (as long as my Ubuntu 8.04 is using Ruby 1.8.6).


Should've used puts "#{i} #{blah}" which is a lot more succinct.


As people have said, you can use

each_with_index

but if you want indices with an iterator different to "each" (for example, if you want to map with an index or something like that) you can concatenate enumerators with the each_with_index method, or simply use with_index:

blahs.each_with_index.map { |blah, index| something(blah, index)}

blahs.map.with_index { |blah, index| something(blah, index) }

This is something you can do from ruby 1.8.7 and 1.9.


[:a, :b, :c].each_with_index do |item, i|
  puts "index: #{i}, item: #{item}"
end

You can't do this with for. I usually like the more declarative call to each personally anyway. Partly because its easy to transition to other forms when you hits the limit of the for syntax.


Yes, it's collection.each to do loops, and then each_with_index to get the index.

You probably ought to read a Ruby book because this is fundamental Ruby and if you don't know it, you're going to be in big trouble (try: http://poignantguide.net/ruby/).

Taken from the Ruby source code:

 hash = Hash.new
 %w(cat dog wombat).each_with_index {|item, index|
   hash[item] = index
 }
 hash   #=> {"cat"=>0, "wombat"=>2, "dog"=>1}

If you don't have the new version of each_with_index, you can use the zip method to pair indexes with elements:

blahs = %w{one two three four five}
puts (1..blahs.length).zip(blahs).map{|pair|'%s %s' % pair}

which produces:

1 one
2 two
3 three
4 four
5 five