Feature #13777
closedArray#delete_all
Description
I want Array#delete_if which returns array of deleted values.
For following code,
array = ["a", "aa", "ab", "bb", "c"]
result = {}
until array.empty?
key = array.first
group, array = array.partition { |v| v.start_with?(key) }
result[key] = group
end
result #=> {"a"=>["a", "aa", "ab"], "bb"=>["bb"], "c"=>["c"]}
With Array#delete_all, This would be able to be written in more elegant way like:
array = ["a", "aa", "ab", "bb", "c"]
result = {}
until array.empty?
key = array.first
result[key] = array.delete_all { |v| v.start_with?(key) }
end
result #=> {"a"=>["a", "aa", "ab"], "bb"=>["bb"], "c"=>["c"]}
This is simplified source code of real use case in Haml: https://github.com/haml/haml/blob/923a0d78874fe1d369f8c7a0bf77f67b2c2139bb/lib/haml/attribute_compiler.rb#L75-L76
This grouping task is necessary for Haml optimization.
Do you know simpler way to write this with existing methods?
Updated by shevegen (Robert A. Heiler) over 7 years ago
I myself usually use .reject! and .select! and then apply the reverse prior to that
if I need to keep these entries as well (or respectively without the '!').
My approach also needs more lines.
If I understood it correctly so then you want to have an operation where you can
not only manipulate the variable at hand, but also additionally select the
entries that were deleted. I do not know of a better way than the one you showed
though, at the least not with any fewer lines of code.
Updated by matz (Yukihiro Matsumoto) about 7 years ago
- Status changed from Open to Rejected
The name delete_all
is not acceptable. This method works as a modifying version of partition
. The name does not indicate the fact. This can be achieved by
result = []
ary.delete_if do|e|
if cond(e)
result << e
true
end
end
If the use-case is frequent and needs to be supported by the core, we will re-investigate. Please reopen.
Matz.