Feature #18334
openENV#to_h returns a new Hash object but Hash#to_h does not, which can cause inconsistencies
Description
I noticed that in ruby-3.1.0-preview1 ENV#dup was removed in favor of ENV#to_h. However, methods that accept either ENV or a Hash object will not behave the same, since ENV#to_h returns a new Hash object but Hash#to_h returns the same Hash instance.
ENV.to_h.object_id
# => 14700
ENV.to_h.object_id
# => 14760
hash = {"FOO" => "bar"}
hash.to_h.object_id
# => 14820
hash.to_h.object_id
# => 14820
I propose that the ENV#dup method be re-added as self.to_h.dup.
        
           Updated by Eregon (Benoit Daloze) almost 4 years ago
          Updated by Eregon (Benoit Daloze) almost 4 years ago
          
          
        
        
      
      I think it would be confusing if ENV#dup returns a Hash and not a ENV, as that would be inconsistent with all other #dup.
to_SHORT never guarantees to return a copy, so if you don't know the receiver and want to mutate the result, you should probably use obj.to_h.dup, which already works fine.
        
           Updated by postmodern (Hal Brodigan) almost 4 years ago
          Updated by postmodern (Hal Brodigan) almost 4 years ago
          
          
        
        
      
      With the current implementation of ENV#to_h, ENV.to_h.dup would create two new Hashes instead of one. hash.to_h.dup would correctly create only one new Hash.
        
           Updated by jeremyevans0 (Jeremy Evans) almost 4 years ago
          Updated by jeremyevans0 (Jeremy Evans) almost 4 years ago
          
          
        
        
      
      - Tracker changed from Bug to Feature
- ruby -v deleted (ruby 3.1.0dev (2021-11-13T20:48:57Z master fc456adc6a) [x86_64-linux])
- Backport deleted (2.6: UNKNOWN, 2.7: UNKNOWN, 3.0: UNKNOWN)