Feature #17056
Updated by TylerRick (Tyler Rick) over 4 years ago
The docs for `String#index` say: > If the second parameter is present, it specifies the position in the string to begin the search. So you can do: ```ruby > 'abcabc'.index('a',2) #=> 3 'abcabc'.index('a') #=> 0 ``` I would expect to also be able to do: ```ruby 'abcabc'.chars.index('a') #=> 0 'abcabc'.chars.index('a', 2) ArgumentError: wrong number of arguments (given 2, expected 0..1) from (pry):19:in `index' ``` After using this feature on strings, it is surprising to find that it is not available on arrays. ## Use case One use case I have for this is scanning a file, trying to find the first matching line within a given section. So first I find the line number of the start of the section, and then I want to use that to find the first match _after_ that line. ```ruby lines = pathname.read.lines section_start_line = lines.index {|line| line.start_with?(/#* #{section_name}/) } lines.index(sought, section_start_line) ``` ## Feature parity This would also give Ruby better parity with other programming languages that support this, like Python: ```python >>> list('abcabc') ['a', 'b', 'c', 'a', 'b', 'c'] >>> list('abcabc').index('a') 0 >>> list('abcabc').index('a', 2) 3 ``` ## End index too? Ideally, we would also add an optional end index arg as well, but `String#index` does not have one, so we could a separate proposal to add `end` to both methods at the same time. Other languages that allow specifying both start and end indexes: - [Python](https://docs.python.org/3/tutorial/datastructures.html) - [C#](https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/api/system.array.indexof?view=netcore-3.1) - ...