Feature #10683
openfix inconsistent behavior of Kernel.Hash()
Description
I find the way the global function Hash (aka Kernel.Hash) works a bit confusing.
To illustrate:
Hash(nil) #=> {} (1)
Hash({}) #=> {} (2)
Hash([]) #=> {} (3)
# but
Hash([[1,2]]) #! TypeError (4)
Case (1) and (2) make perfect sense to me (calling Hash(var) when var is an optional argument defaulting to nil will always give a (possibly empty) Hash or a TypeError, which is very useful).
Case (3) however seems inconsistent, since (4) doesn't work.
To contrast this with the respective String function:
String([]) #=> "[]"
String('') #=> ""
String({}) #=> "{}"
String(0) #=> "0"
String(nil) #=> ""
it seems that calling String(obj) is equivalent to calling obj.to_s.
Thus I would assume Hash(obj) being equivalent to calling obj.to_h.
It is not though (calling to_h on [[1,2]] gives {1=>2}, while using Hash() raises a TypeError).
I propose to do one of the following changes:
- either remove the special handling of
[], such that onlynilor aHashare valid values to be passed toHash(), or - change
Hash()to callto_hon it's argument, when the argument is neithernilnor aHash.
Updated by shevegen (Robert A. Heiler) almost 11 years ago
Interesting. [] is indeed treated differently than
Hash([nil])
TypeError: can't convert Array into Hash
Hash([1,2])
TypeError: can't convert Array into Hash
Perhaps there is a reason for [] as input is being
treated differently?
Updated by sawa (Tsuyoshi Sawada) almost 11 years ago
Since nil.to_h is {}, which equals Hash(nil), and some_hash.to_h is some_hash, which equals Hash(some_hash), your claim:
- change
Hash()to callto_hon it's argument, when the argument is neithernilnor aHash.
is equivalent to
- change
Hash()to callto_hon it's argument.
I don't think either of your proposed options will be accepted.
Updated by recursive-madman (Recursive Madman) almost 11 years ago
I don't think either of your proposed options will be accepted.
I can see that making Hash(obj) equivalent to obj.to_h would be a major change in functionality.
The primary reasons for opening up this issue are two points:
- The special case of
[]- what does it accomplish? - The inconsistency between the global
HashandStringfunctions --String(obj)being equivalent toobj.to_s, whileHash(obj)being roughly equivalent toobj.to_hash(instead ofobj.to_h)
As written elsewhere, the short conversion methods (to_i, to_s, to_h, ...) are supposed to be for explicit conversion, while the long ones (to_int, to_str, to_hash, ...) are for implicit conversion.
Now how do these global functions fit into the picture? What can a ruby developer expect them to do without having to read their individual documentation?