I'm trying to get the first key and value key from a hash table in ruby. I don't know the key values of the hash because it is passed to the method. I cant find anywhere online how to find the first key/value as a separate hash table. I think hash[0]
will just try to find an element with a name 0 it just returns nil
when I run the code.
I know I can find the key name and the value and then create a new hash from them but i wonder if there is an easier way to do this so I get a hash right away.
here is my code:
def rps_game_winner(game)
rock_in_hash = game.invert['R']
paper_in_hash = game.invert['P']
scissors_in_hash = game.invert['S']
if(rock_in_hash)
if(paper_in_hash)
return paper_in_hash;
elsif(scissors_in_hash)
return rock_in_hash
end
elsif(paper_in_hash)
if(rock_in_hash)
return paper_in_hash
elsif(scissors_in_hash)
return scissors_in_hash
end
end
key = game.keys[-1]
value = game.values[-1]
winner = {key => value}
return winner
end
game_one = { "Bob" => 'P', "Jim" => 'P' }
puts rps_game_winner(game_one)
This gets me the correct result the problem is I don't understand why it's -1 instead of zero... And i was hoping there was a better way to get the first key/value pair of a hash table instead of creating new hash table with the key and value you retrieved from the previous table.
You can just do
key, value = hash.first
or if you prefer:
key = hash.keys[0]
value = hash.values[0]
Then maybe:
new_hash = {key => value}
There is a shorter answer that does not require you to use extra variables:
h = { "a" => 100, "b" => 200 , "c" => 300, "d" => 400, "e" => 500}
Hash[*h.first] #=> {"a" => 100}
Or if you want to retrieve a key/value at a any single position
Hash[*h.to_a.at(1)] #=> {"b" => 200}
Or retrieve a key/values from a range of positions:
Hash[h.to_a[1,3]] #=> {"b"=>200, "c"=>300, "d"=>400}
[hash.first].to_h
Another way to do it.
my_hash = { "a" => "first", "b" => "second" }
{ my_hash.keys.first => my_hash.values.first }
This works too
Success story sharing
rps_game_winner': undefined method
first' for {"Jim"=>"P", "Bob"=>"P"}:Hash (NoMethodError) from t.rb:31. But what really blew my mind is that when i tried the second method (which I was trying to avoid because i thought there was an easier way) i get the second entry Bob P and whats even stranger when i call it with keys[-1] values[-1] i get the first entry JimP I completly dont understand whats going on. Do you have any ideas. Im using codepad to interpret my script.