Learning ruby – day 2

Table of Contents

Introduction
Content
Conclusion

Introduction

Hey guys, welcome to my blog recording my ruby self-taught process

I decided to learn this amazing language while I was trying to solving some ruby challenges to…


This content originally appeared on DEV Community and was authored by aderayevans

Table of Contents

  1. Introduction
  2. Content
  3. Conclusion

Introduction

Hey guys, welcome to my blog recording my ruby self-taught process

I decided to learn this amazing language while I was trying to solving some ruby challenges to get my tenth badge in HackerRank

At the first day, We have gotten to know Ruby. If you found it a little hard to understand then let me know immediately, otherwise I will keep writing this blog as a learning process recording

Today I will focus on more details what we have learned at the first day

Print output

Print value of variable and type of variable

name = "Ade"
puts "Hello #{name}!"
puts "#{name.class.name}"

As we have discussed at the first day "Everything is Object", so we're now able to know that type of variable is a class name

Output

PS D:\Workplace> ruby hello-world.rb
Hello Ade!
String

Print raw version of an object, use for debugging string.

P is a kernel method

a = " \n"
p a

Output

" \n"

Pretty printting, use for print Hash object

json = {
    "2019":[
       {
          "language":"Ruby",
          "edition":"seventh"
       },
       {
          "language":"Python",
          "edition":"sixth"
       },
       {
          "language":"Oracle",
          "edition":"second"
       }
    ],
    "2020":[
        {
          "language":"C++",
          "edition":"first"
       },
       {
          "language":"Java",
          "edition":"fourth"
       },
       {
          "language":"Mysql",
          "edition":"third"
       }
    ]
}
puts json
puts "----------------------------------------------------"
pp json

Output

{:"2019"=>[{:language=>"Ruby", :edition=>"seventh"}, {:language=>"Python", :edition=>"sixth"}, {:language=>"Oracle", :edition=>"second"}], :"2020"=>[{:language=>"C++", :edition=>"first"}, {:language=>"Java", :edition=>"fourth"}, {:language=>"Mysql", :edition=>"third"}]}
----------------------------------------------------
{:"2019"=>
  [{:language=>"Ruby", :edition=>"seventh"},
   {:language=>"Python", :edition=>"sixth"},
   {:language=>"Oracle", :edition=>"second"}],
 :"2020"=>
  [{:language=>"C++", :edition=>"first"},
   {:language=>"Java", :edition=>"fourth"},
   {:language=>"Mysql", :edition=>"third"}]}

As you can see, it looks pretty as it name

Too much if - use Case instead

if today == "Monday"
    puts "2, 30 July 2021"
elsif today == "Tuesday"
    puts "3, 30 July 2021"
#...
else
    puts "8, 30 July 2021"
end
case today
when "Monday"
    puts "2, 30 July 2021"
when "Tuesday"
    puts "3, 30 July 2021"
#...
else
    puts "8, 30 July 2021"
end

Output

6, 30 July 2021

Playing with array elements

arr = [65, 66, 67, 68, 69, 70, 71, 72, 73, 74, 75, 76, 77, 78]
puts "Array: #{arr.inspect}"
puts "Array length = #{arr.length}"
puts "First element: #{arr[0]}"
puts "First element: #{arr.first}"
puts "Last element: #{arr[-1]}"
puts "Last element: #{arr.last}"
puts "Five first elements #{arr.take(5).inspect}"
puts "Ignores five first elements #{arr.drop(5).inspect}"
puts "Element at index 3 #{arr[3]}"
puts "Elements from index 3 to index 7 #{arr[3..7]}"
puts "Elements from index 3 to index 6 #{arr[3...7]}"
puts "8 Elements from index 3 #{arr[3, 8]}"

Output

Array: [65, 66, 67, 68, 69, 70, 71, 72, 73, 74, 75, 76, 77, 78]
Array length = 14
First element: 65
First element: 65
Last element: 78
Last element: 78
Five first elements [65, 66, 67, 68, 69]
Ignores five first elements [70, 71, 72, 73, 74, 75, 76, 77, 78]
Element at index 3 68
Elements from index 3 to index 7 [68, 69, 70, 71, 72]
Elements from index 3 to index 6 [68, 69, 70, 71]
8 Elements from index 3 [68, 69, 70, 71, 72, 73, 74, 75]

inspect help puts print all array elements in one line

Add elements to array

At the last blog, we have learned a bunch of ways to delete elements from array, let's look back a little

arr = [65, 66, 67, 68, 69, 70, 71, 72, 73, 74, 75, 76, 77, 78]
puts "Array: \t\t\t#{arr.inspect}"
arr.shift
puts "Delete first element: \t#{arr.inspect}"
arr.pop.inspect
puts "Delete last element: \t#{arr.inspect}"
arr.delete_at(2).inspect
puts "Delete at index 2: \t#{arr.inspect}"

Output

Array:                  [65, 66, 67, 68, 69, 70, 71, 72, 73, 74, 75, 76, 77, 78]
Delete first element:   [66, 67, 68, 69, 70, 71, 72, 73, 74, 75, 76, 77, 78]
Delete last element:    [66, 67, 68, 69, 70, 71, 72, 73, 74, 75, 76, 77]
Delete at index 2:      [66, 67, 69, 70, 71, 72, 73, 74, 75, 76, 77]

Now we're learning some ways to add elements to array

arr = [65, 66, 67, 68, 69, 70]
puts "Array: \t\t\t#{arr.inspect}"
arr.unshift(97, 98)
puts "Add at first position: \t#{arr.inspect}"
arr.push(254, 255)
puts "Add at last position: \t#{arr.inspect}"
arr.insert(5, 128, 129)
puts "Add at index 5: \t#{arr.inspect}"

Output

Array:                  [65, 66, 67, 68, 69, 70]
Add at first position:  [97, 98, 65, 66, 67, 68, 69, 70]
Add at last position:   [97, 98, 65, 66, 67, 68, 69, 70, 254, 255]
Add at index 5:         [97, 98, 65, 66, 67, 128, 129, 68, 69, 70, 254, 255]

As you can see we can add more than just one element

Here document

puts 'Starting', '------------', <<HERE, 'Real Ending'
    1. Salad mix.
    2. Strawberries.
    3. Cereal.
    4. Milk.
HERE

Output

Starting
------------
    1. Salad mix.
    2. Strawberries.
    3. Cereal.
    4. Milk.
Real Ending

This will print 'Starting' and '------------' normally as puts always do

The <<HERE here means the next occurrence of HERE will be the end of this document

'Real Ending' is lying right after the <<HERE, will be print out right after the end of the document

You can set multiple << to exchange words in the document

<<HERE will be failed if there is any space or tab before the next occurrence HERE, <<-HERE is saying the next occurence can have some space, tab or HERE

Please check this link to learn more about this feature

https://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Ruby_Programming/Here_documents

String

In this part, we're going to talk a little more about string in Ruby

String elements can be called in multiple ways

  • Each char
str.each_char {|x| p x}

Output

"W"
"h"
"a"
"t"
"'"
"s"
" "
"u"
"p"
"?"
  • Each byte
str.each_byte {|x| p x}

Output

87
104
97
116
39
115
32
117
112
63
  • Each line
"hello\nworld".each_line {|s| p s}

Output

"hello\n"
"world"

We can access elements of a string just like how we do with array

But we cannot delete or add elements to string like we do with array or hash

This is how we do it

Remember these methods will just return a new string, it does not change the original string

  • Delete last char
str = "Hi   \t\r\n"
p str.chop.chop

Output

"Hi   "

You can see that we can chop multiple time, \r, \n, \r\n (exept \n\r though) will be treat as one char

  • Delete multiple last chars
str = "Hi, My name is Ade\r\n\r"
p str = str.chomp
p str = str.chomp
p str.chomp "Ade"

Output

"Hi, My name is Ade\r\n"
"Hi, My name is Ade"
"Hi, My name is "

Delete \r or \n or \r\n unless there is a parameter

  • Delete whitespaces
str = "   \r\n\tHi     ,  Are you having fun?\t   \r    \n"
p str.strip

Output

"Hi     ,  Are you having fun?"

Delete the leading and trailing \t\n\r and whitespaces

  • Append str
str = ""
str += "Hello"
# or
str = ""
str << "Ruby is " << "pretty"
# How to append non-string
str << 3.14.to_s
  • Add to the beginning
str = "Gimme your wallet"
p str
p str.prepend("Please, ")

Output

"Gimme your wallet"
"Please, Gimme your wallet"

Check text occurs in str with include

str.include? "wallet"

Replace text in str with gsub, first parameter can be RegExp or String, second parameter is string will replace the occurrence texts

str.gsub(/wallet/, heart)
str = "Please, Gimme your wallet"
if str.include? "wallet"
    puts str.gsub(/wallet/, "heart")
end

Output

Please, Gimme your heart

Conclusion

We have learned more about printing object

Interesting feature called Here document to print multiple line strings

Acknowledged how to access, add and delete elements in array and string, or as i say "playing around with array and string"

I'd like to thank HackerRank for giving me a chance to acknowledge and be interesting in this cool language

If guys found Ruby is fascinating, please come to the link below and solve some Ruby challenges with me

https://www.hackerrank.com/domains/ruby

If you have any question or suggestion, please let me know at the comment section below.

OK I'm going to wrap this up here

Thanks for reading my blog


This content originally appeared on DEV Community and was authored by aderayevans


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