What is a elegant way in Ruby to tell if a variable is a Hash or an Array?
To check what @some_var
is, I am doing a
if @some_var.class.to_s == 'Hash'
I am sure there is a more elegant way to check if @some_var
is a Hash
or an Array
.
You can just do:
@some_var.class == Hash
or also something like:
@some_var.is_a?(Hash)
It's worth noting that the "is_a?" method is true if the class is anywhere in the objects ancestry tree. for instance:
@some_var.is_a?(Object) # => true
the above is true if @some_var is an instance of a hash or other class that stems from Object. So, if you want a strict match on the class type, using the == or instance_of? method is probably what you're looking for.
First of all, the best answer for the literal question is
Hash === @some_var
But the question really should have been answered by showing how to do duck-typing here. That depends a bit on what kind of duck you need.
@some_var.respond_to?(:each_pair)
or
@some_var.respond_to?(:has_key?)
or even
@some_var.respond_to?(:to_hash)
may be right depending on the application.
Usually in ruby when you are looking for "type" you are actually wanting the "duck-type" or "does is quack like a duck?". You would see if it responds to a certain method:
@some_var.respond_to?(:each)
You can iterate over @some_var because it responds to :each
If you really want to know the type and if it is Hash or Array then you can do:
["Hash", "Array"].include?(@some_var.class) #=> check both through instance class
@some_var.kind_of?(Hash) #=> to check each at once
@some_var.is_a?(Array) #=> same as kind_of
Hash === @some_var #=> return Boolean
this can also be used with case statement
case @some_var
when Hash
...
when Array
...
end
I use this:
@var.respond_to?(:keys)
It works for Hash and ActiveSupport::HashWithIndifferentAccess.