Hashie
Hashie is a growing collection of tools that extend Hashes and make them more useful.
Installation
Hashie is available as a RubyGem:
$ gem install hashie
Upgrading
You’re reading the documentation for the stable release of Hashie, 4.0.0. Please read UPGRADING when upgrading from a previous version.
Hash Extensions
The library is broken up into a number of atomically includable Hash extension modules as described below. This provides maximum flexibility for users to mix and match functionality while maintaining feature parity with earlier versions of Hashie.
Any of the extensions listed below can be mixed into a class by include
-ing Hashie::Extensions::ExtensionName
.
Logging
Hashie has a built-in logger that you can override. By default, it logs to STDOUT
but can be replaced by any Logger
class. The logger is accessible on the Hashie module, as shown below:
# Set the logger to the Rails logger Hashie.logger = Rails.logger
Coercion
Coercions allow you to set up “coercion rules” based either on the key or the value type to massage data as it’s being inserted into the Hash. Key coercions might be used, for example, in lightweight data modeling applications such as an API client:
class Tweet < Hash include Hashie::Extensions::Coercion include Hashie::Extensions::MergeInitializer coerce_key :user, User end user_hash = { name: "Bob" } Tweet.new(user: user_hash) # => automatically calls User.coerce(user_hash) or # User.new(user_hash) if that isn't present.
Value coercions, on the other hand, will coerce values based on the type of the value being inserted. This is useful if you are trying to build a Hash-like class that is self-propagating.
class SpecialHash < Hash include Hashie::Extensions::Coercion coerce_value Hash, SpecialHash def initialize(hash = {}) super hash.each_pair do |k,v| self[k] = v end end end
Coercing Collections
class Tweet < Hash include Hashie::Extensions::Coercion coerce_key :mentions, Array[User] coerce_key :friends, Set[User] end user_hash = { name: "Bob" } mentions_hash= [user_hash, user_hash] friends_hash = [user_hash] tweet = Tweet.new(mentions: mentions_hash, friends: friends_hash) # => automatically calls User.coerce(user_hash) or # User.new(user_hash) if that isn't present on each element of the array tweet.mentions.map(&:class) # => [User, User] tweet.friends.class # => Set
Coercing Hashes
class Relation def initialize(string) @relation = string end end class Tweet < Hash include Hashie::Extensions::Coercion coerce_key :relations, Hash[User => Relation] end user_hash = { name: "Bob" } relations_hash= { user_hash => "father", user_hash => "friend" } tweet = Tweet.new(relations: relations_hash) tweet.relations.map { |k,v| [k.class, v.class] } # => [[User, Relation], [User, Relation]] tweet.relations.class # => Hash # => automatically calls User.coerce(user_hash) on each key # and Relation.new on each value since Relation doesn't define the `coerce` class method
Coercing Core Types
Hashie handles coercion to the following by using standard conversion methods:
type | method |
---|---|
Integer | #to_i |
Float | #to_f |
Complex | #to_c |
Rational | #to_r |
String | #to_s |
Symbol | #to_sym |
Note: The standard Ruby conversion methods are less strict than you may assume. For example, :foo.to_i
raises an error but "foo".to_i
returns 0.
You can also use coerce from the following supertypes with coerce_value
:
- Integer
- Numeric
Hashie does not have built-in support for coercing boolean values, since Ruby does not have a built-in boolean type or standard method for coercing to a boolean. You can coerce to booleans using a custom proc.
Coercion Proc
You can use a custom coercion proc on either #coerce_key
or #coerce_value
. This is useful for coercing to booleans or other simple types without creating a new class and coerce
method. For example:
class Tweet < Hash include Hashie::Extensions::Coercion coerce_key :retweeted, ->(v) do case v when String !!(v =~ /\A(true|t|yes|y|1)\z/i) when Numeric !v.to_i.zero? else v == true end end end
A note on circular coercion
Since coerce_key
is a class-level method, you cannot have circular coercion without the use of a proc. For example:
class CategoryHash < Hash include Hashie::Extensions::Coercion include Hashie::Extensions::MergeInitializer coerce_key :products, Array[ProductHash] end class ProductHash < Hash include Hashie::Extensions::Coercion include Hashie::Extensions::MergeInitializer coerce_key :categories, Array[CategoriesHash] end
This will fail with a NameError
for CategoryHash::ProductHash
because ProductHash
is not defined at the point that coerce_key
is happening for CategoryHash
.
To work around this, you can use a coercion proc. For example, you could do:
class CategoryHash < Hash # ... coerce_key :products, ->(value) do return value.map { |v| ProductHash.new(v) } if value.respond_to?(:map) ProductHash.new(value) end end
KeyConversion
The KeyConversion extension gives you the convenience methods of symbolize_keys
and stringify_keys
along with their bang counterparts. You can also include just stringify or just symbolize with Hashie::Extensions::StringifyKeys
or Hashie::Extensions::SymbolizeKeys
.
Hashie also has a utility method for converting keys on a Hash without a mixin:
Hashie.symbolize_keys! hash # => Symbolizes keys of hash. Hashie.symbolize_keys hash # => Returns a copy of hash with keys symbolized. Hashie.stringify_keys! hash # => Stringifies keys of hash. Hashie.stringify_keys hash # => Returns a copy of hash with keys stringified.
MergeInitializer
The MergeInitializer extension simply makes it possible to initialize a Hash subclass with another Hash, giving you a quick short-hand.
MethodAccess
The MethodAccess extension allows you to quickly build method-based reading, writing, and querying into your Hash descendant. It can also be included as individual modules, i.e. Hashie::Extensions::MethodReader
, Hashie::Extensions::MethodWriter
and Hashie::Extensions::MethodQuery
.
class MyHash < Hash include Hashie::Extensions::MethodAccess end h = MyHash.new h.abc = 'def' h.abc # => 'def' h.abc? # => true
MethodAccessWithOverride
The MethodAccessWithOverride extension is like the MethodAccess extension, except that it allows you to override Hash methods. It aliases any overridden method with two leading underscores. To include only this overriding functionality, you can include the single module Hashie::Extensions::MethodOverridingWriter
.
class MyHash < Hash include Hashie::Extensions::MethodAccess end class MyOverridingHash < Hash include Hashie::Extensions::MethodAccessWithOverride end non_overriding = MyHash.new non_overriding.zip = 'a-dee-doo-dah' non_overriding.zip #=> [[['zip', 'a-dee-doo-dah']]] overriding = MyOverridingHash.new overriding.zip = 'a-dee-doo-dah' overriding.zip #=> 'a-dee-doo-dah' overriding.__zip #=> [[['zip', 'a-dee-doo-dah']]]
MethodOverridingInitializer
The MethodOverridingInitializer extension will override hash methods if you pass in a normal hash to the constructor. It aliases any overridden method with two leading underscores. To include only this initializing functionality, you can include the single module Hashie::Extensions::MethodOverridingInitializer
.
class MyHash < Hash end class MyOverridingHash < Hash include Hashie::Extensions::MethodOverridingInitializer end non_overriding = MyHash.new(zip: 'a-dee-doo-dah') non_overriding.zip #=> [] overriding = MyOverridingHash.new(zip: 'a-dee-doo-dah') overriding.zip #=> 'a-dee-doo-dah' overriding.__zip #=> [[['zip', 'a-dee-doo-dah']]]
IndifferentAccess
This extension can be mixed in to your Hash subclass to allow you to use Strings or Symbols interchangeably as keys; similar to the params
hash in Rails.
In addition, IndifferentAccess will also inject itself into sub-hashes so they behave the same.
Example:
class MyHash < Hash include Hashie::Extensions::MergeInitializer include Hashie::Extensions::IndifferentAccess end myhash = MyHash.new(:cat => 'meow', 'dog' => 'woof') myhash['cat'] # => "meow" myhash[:cat] # => "meow" myhash[:dog] # => "woof" myhash['dog'] # => "woof" # Auto-Injecting into sub-hashes. myhash['fishes'] = {} myhash['fishes'].class # => Hash myhash['fishes'][:food] = 'flakes' myhash['fishes']['food'] # => "flakes"
IgnoreUndeclared
This extension can be mixed in to silently ignore undeclared properties on initialization instead of raising an error. This is useful when using a Trash to capture a subset of a larger hash.
class Person < Trash include Hashie::Extensions::IgnoreUndeclared property :first_name property :last_name end user_data = { first_name: 'Freddy', last_name: 'Nostrils', email: 'freddy@example.com' } p = Person.new(user_data) # 'email' is silently ignored p.first_name # => 'Freddy' p.last_name # => 'Nostrils' p.email # => NoMethodError
DeepMerge
This extension allows you to easily include a recursive merging
system into any Hash descendant:
class MyHash < Hash include Hashie::Extensions::DeepMerge end h1 = MyHash[{ x: { y: [4,5,6] }, z: [7,8,9] }] h2 = MyHash[{ x: { y: [7,8,9] }, z: "xyz" }] h1.deep_merge(h2) # => { x: { y: [7, 8, 9] }, z: "xyz" } h2.deep_merge(h1) # => { x: { y: [4, 5, 6] }, z: [7, 8, 9] }
Like with Hash#merge in the standard library, a block can be provided to merge values:
class MyHash < Hash include Hashie::Extensions::DeepMerge end h1 = MyHash[{ a: 100, b: 200, c: { c1: 100 } }] h2 = MyHash[{ b: 250, c: { c1: 200 } }] h1.deep_merge(h2) { |key, this_val, other_val| this_val + other_val } # => { a: 100, b: 450, c: { c1: 300 } }
DeepFetch
This extension can be mixed in to provide for safe and concise retrieval of deeply nested hash values. In the event that the requested key does not exist a block can be provided and its value will be returned.
Though this is a hash extension, it conveniently allows for arrays to be present in the nested structure. This feature makes the extension particularly useful for working with JSON API responses.
user = { name: { first: 'Bob', last: 'Boberts' }, groups: [ { name: 'Rubyists' }, { name: 'Open source enthusiasts' } ] } user.extend Hashie::Extensions::DeepFetch user.deep_fetch :name, :first # => 'Bob' user.deep_fetch :name, :middle # => 'KeyError: Could not fetch middle' # using a default block user.deep_fetch(:name, :middle) { |key| 'default' } # => 'default' # a nested array user.deep_fetch :groups, 1, :name # => 'Open source enthusiasts'
DeepFind
This extension can be mixed in to provide for concise searching for keys within a deeply nested hash.
It can also search through any Enumerable contained within the hash for objects with the specified key.
Note: The searches are depth-first, so it is not guaranteed that a shallowly nested value will be found before a deeply nested value.
user = { name: { first: 'Bob', last: 'Boberts' }, groups: [ { name: 'Rubyists' }, { name: 'Open source enthusiasts' } ] } user.extend Hashie::Extensions::DeepFind user.deep_find(:name) #=> { first: 'Bob', last: 'Boberts' } user.deep_detect(:name) #=> { first: 'Bob', last: 'Boberts' } user.deep_find_all(:name) #=> [{ first: 'Bob', last: 'Boberts' }, 'Rubyists', 'Open source enthusiasts'] user.deep_select(:name) #=> [{ first: 'Bob', last: 'Boberts' }, 'Rubyists', 'Open source enthusiasts']
DeepLocate
This extension can be mixed in to provide a depth first search based search for enumerables matching a given comparator callable.
It returns all enumerables which contain at least one element, for which the given comparator returns true
.
Because the container objects are returned, the result elements can be modified in place. This way, one can perform modifications on deeply nested hashes without the need to know the exact paths.
books = [ { title: "Ruby for beginners", pages: 120 }, { title: "CSS for intermediates", pages: 80 }, { title: "Collection of ruby books", books: [ { title: "Ruby for the rest of us", pages: 576 } ] } ] books.extend(Hashie::Extensions::DeepLocate) # for ruby 1.9 leave *no* space between the lambda rocket and the braces # http://ruby-journal.com/becareful-with-space-in-lambda-hash-rocket-syntax-between-ruby-1-dot-9-and-2-dot-0/ books.deep_locate -> (key, value, object) { key == :title && value.include?("Ruby") } # => [{:title=>"Ruby for beginners", :pages=>120}, {:title=>"Ruby for the rest of us", :pages=>576}] books.deep_locate -> (key, value, object) { key == :pages && value <= 120 } # => [{:title=>"Ruby for beginners", :pages=>120}, {:title=>"CSS for intermediates", :pages=>80}]
StrictKeyAccess
This extension can be mixed in to allow a Hash to raise an error when attempting to extract a value using a non-existent key.
Example:
class StrictKeyAccessHash < Hash include Hashie::Extensions::StrictKeyAccess end >> hash = StrictKeyAccessHash[foo: "bar"] => {:foo=>"bar"} >> hash[:foo] => "bar" >> hash[:cow] KeyError: key not found: :cow
Mash
Mash is an extended Hash that gives simple pseudo-object functionality that can be built from hashes and easily extended. It is intended to give the user easier access to the objects within the Mash through a property-like syntax, while still retaining all Hash functionality.
Example:
mash = Hashie::Mash.new mash.name? # => false mash.name # => nil mash.name = "My Mash" mash.name # => "My Mash" mash.name? # => true mash.inspect # => mash = Hashie::Mash.new # use bang methods for multi-level assignment mash.author!.name = "Michael Bleigh" mash.author # => mash = Hashie::Mash.new # use under-bang methods for multi-level testing mash.author_.name? # => false mash.inspect # =>
Note: The ?
method will return false if a key has been set to false or nil. In order to check if a key has been set at all, use the mash.key?('some_key')
method instead.
How does Mash handle conflicts with pre-existing methods?
Please note that a Mash will not override methods through the use of the property-like syntax. This can lead to confusion if you expect to be able to access a Mash value through the property-like syntax for a key that conflicts with a method name. However, it protects users of your library from the unexpected behavior of those methods being overridden behind the scenes.
Example:
mash = Hashie::Mash.new mash.name = "My Mash" mash.zip = "Method Override?" mash.zip # => [[["name", "My Mash"]], [["zip", "Method Override?"]]]
Since Mash gives you the ability to set arbitrary keys that then act as methods, Hashie logs when there is a conflict between a key and a pre-existing method. You can set the logger that this logs message to via the global Hashie logger:
Hashie.logger = Rails.logger
You can also disable the logging in subclasses of Mash:
class Response < Hashie::Mash disable_warnings end
The default is to disable logging for all methods that conflict. If you would like to only disable the logging for specific methods, you can include an array of method keys:
class Response < Hashie::Mash disable_warnings :zip, :zap end
This behavior is cumulative. The examples above and below behave identically.
class Response < Hashie::Mash disable_warnings :zip disable_warnings :zap end
Disable warnings will honor the last disable_warnings
call. Calling without parameters will override the ignored methods list, and calling with parameters will create a new ignored methods list. This includes child classes that inherit from a class that disables warnings.
class Message < Hashie::Mash disable_warnings :zip, :zap disable_warnings end # No errors will be logged Message.new(merge: 'true', compact: true)
class Message < Hashie::Mash disable_warnings end class Response < Message disable_warnings :zip, :zap end # 2 errors will be logged Response.new(merge: 'true', compact: true, zip: '90210', zap: 'electric')
If you would like to create an anonymous subclass of a Hashie::Mash with key conflict warnings disabled:
Hashie::Mash.quiet.new(zip: '90210', compact: true) # no errors logged Hashie::Mash.quiet(:zip).new(zip: '90210', compact: true) # error logged for compact
How does the wrapping of Mash sub-Hashes work?
Mash duplicates any sub-Hashes that you add to it and wraps them in a Mash. This allows for infinite chaining of nested Hashes within a Mash without modifying the object(s) that are passed into the Mash. When you subclass Mash, the subclass wraps any sub-Hashes in its own class. This preserves any extensions that you mixed into the Mash subclass and allows them to work within the sub-Hashes, in addition to the main containing Mash.
Example:
mash = Hashie::Mash.new(name: "Hashie", dependencies: { rake: "< 11", rspec: "~> 3.0" }) mash.dependencies.class #=> Hashie::Mash class MyGem < Hashie::Mash; end my_gem = MyGem.new(name: "Hashie", dependencies: { rake: "< 11", rspec: "~> 3.0" }) my_gem.dependencies.class #=> MyGem
What else can Mash do?
Mash allows you also to transform any files into a Mash objects.
Example:
#/etc/config/settings/twitter.yml development: api_key: 'api_key' production: api_key: <%= ENV['API_KEY'] %> #let's say that ENV['API_KEY'] is set to 'abcd'
mash = Mash.load('settings/twitter.yml') mash.development.api_key # => 'localhost' mash.development.api_key = "foo" # => <# RuntimeError can't modify frozen ...> mash.development.api_key? # => true
You can also load with a Pathname
object:
mash = Mash.load(Pathname 'settings/twitter.yml') mash.development.api_key # => 'localhost'
You can access a Mash from another class:
mash = Mash.load('settings/twitter.yml')[ENV['RACK_ENV']] Twitter.extend mash.to_module # NOTE: if you want another name than settings, call: to_module('my_settings') Twitter.settings.api_key # => 'abcd'
You can use another parser (by default: YamlErbParser):
#/etc/data/user.csv id | name | lastname ---|------------- | ------------- 1 |John | Doe 2 |Laurent | Garnier
mash = Mash.load('data/user.csv', parser: MyCustomCsvParser) # => { 1 => { name: 'John', lastname: 'Doe'}, 2 => { name: 'Laurent', lastname: 'Garnier' } } mash[1] #=> { name: 'John', lastname: 'Doe' }
The Mash#load
method calls YAML.safe_load(path, [], [], true)
.
Specify permitted_symbols
, permitted_classes
and aliases
options as needed.
Mash.load('data/user.csv', permitted_classes: [Symbol], permitted_symbols: [], aliases: false)
Mash Extension: KeepOriginalKeys
This extension can be mixed into a Mash to keep the form of any keys passed directly into the Mash. By default, Mash converts keys to strings to give indifferent access. This extension still allows indifferent access, but keeps the form of the keys to eliminate confusion when you’re not expecting the keys to change.
class KeepingMash < ::Hashie::Mash include Hashie::Extensions::Mash::KeepOriginalKeys end mash = KeepingMash.new(:symbol_key => :symbol, 'string_key' => 'string') mash.to_hash == { :symbol_key => :symbol, 'string_key' => 'string' } #=> true mash.symbol_key #=> :symbol mash[:symbol_key] #=> :symbol mash['symbol_key'] #=> :symbol mash.string_key #=> 'string' mash['string_key'] #=> 'string' mash[:string_key] #=> 'string'
Mash Extension: SafeAssignment
This extension can be mixed into a Mash to guard the attempted overwriting of methods by property setters. When mixed in, the Mash will raise an ArgumentError
if you attempt to write a property with the same name as an existing method.
Example:
class SafeMash < ::Hashie::Mash include Hashie::Extensions::Mash::SafeAssignment end safe_mash = SafeMash.new safe_mash.zip = 'Test' # => ArgumentError safe_mash[:zip] = 'test' # => still ArgumentError
Mash Extension: SymbolizeKeys
This extension can be mixed into a Mash to change the default behavior of converting keys to strings. After mixing this extension into a Mash, the Mash will convert all keys to symbols. It can be useful to use with keywords argument, which required symbol keys.
class SymbolizedMash < ::Hashie::Mash include Hashie::Extensions::Mash::SymbolizeKeys end symbol_mash = SymbolizedMash.new symbol_mash['test'] = 'value' symbol_mash.test #=> 'value' symbol_mash.to_h #=> {test: 'value'} def example(test:) puts test end example(symbol_mash) #=> value
There is a major benefit and coupled with a major trade-off to this decision (at least on older Rubies). As a benefit, by using symbols as keys, you will be able to use the implicit conversion of a Mash via the #to_hash
method to destructure (or splat) the contents of a Mash out to a block. This can be handy for doing iterations through the Mash’s keys and values, as follows:
symbol_mash = SymbolizedMash.new(id: 123, name: 'Rey') symbol_mash.each do |key, value| # key is :id, then :name # value is 123, then 'Rey' end
However, on Rubies less than 2.0, this means that every key you send to the Mash will generate a symbol. Since symbols are not garbage-collected on older versions of Ruby, this can cause a slow memory leak when using a symbolized Mash with data generated from user input.
Mash Extension: DefineAccessors
This extension can be mixed into a Mash so it makes it behave like OpenStruct
. It reduces the overhead of method_missing?
magic by lazily defining field accessors when they’re requested.
class MyHash < ::Hashie::Mash include Hashie::Extensions::Mash::DefineAccessors end mash = MyHash.new MyHash.method_defined?(:foo=) #=> false mash.foo = 123 MyHash.method_defined?(:foo=) #=> true MyHash.method_defined?(:foo) #=> false mash.foo #=> 123 MyHash.method_defined?(:foo) #=> true
You can also extend the existing mash without defining a class:
mash = ::Hashie::Mash.new.with_accessors!
Dash
Dash is an extended Hash that has a discrete set of defined properties and only those properties may be set on the hash. Additionally, you can set defaults for each property. You can also flag a property as required. Required properties will raise an exception if unset. Another option is message for required properties, which allow you to add custom messages for required property.
You can also conditionally require certain properties by passing a Proc or Symbol. If a Proc is provided, it will be run in the context of the Dash instance. If a Symbol is provided, the value returned for the property or method of the same name will be evaluated. The property will be required if the result of the conditional is truthy.
Example:
class Person < Hashie::Dash property :name, required: true property :age, required: true, message: 'must be set.' property :email property :phone, required: -> { email.nil? }, message: 'is required if email is not set.' property :pants, required: :weekday?, message: 'are only required on weekdays.' property :occupation, default: 'Rubyist' def weekday? [ Time.now.saturday?, Time.now.sunday? ].none? end end p = Person.new # => ArgumentError: The property 'name' is required for this Dash. p = Person.new(name: 'Bob') # => ArgumentError: The property 'age' must be set. p = Person.new(name: "Bob", age: 18) p.name # => 'Bob' p.name = nil # => ArgumentError: The property 'name' is required for this Dash. p.age # => 18 p.age = nil # => ArgumentError: The property 'age' must be set. p.email = 'abc@def.com' p.occupation # => 'Rubyist' p.email # => 'abc@def.com' p[:awesome] # => NoMethodError p[:occupation] # => 'Rubyist' p.update_attributes!(name: 'Trudy', occupation: 'Evil') p.occupation # => 'Evil' p.name # => 'Trudy' p.update_attributes!(occupation: nil) p.occupation # => 'Rubyist'
Properties defined as symbols are not the same thing as properties defined as strings.
Example:
class Tricky < Hashie::Dash property :trick property 'trick' end p = Tricky.new(trick: 'one', 'trick' => 'two') p.trick # => 'one', always symbol version p[:trick] # => 'one' p['trick'] # => 'two'
Note that accessing a property as a method always uses the symbol version.
class Tricky < Hashie::Dash property 'trick' end p = Tricky.new('trick' => 'two') p.trick # => NoMethodError
Potential gotchas
Because Dashes are subclasses of the built-in Ruby Hash class, the double-splat operator takes the Dash as-is without any conversion. This can lead to strange behavior when you use the double-splat operator on a Dash as the first part of a keyword list or built Hash. For example:
class Foo < Hashie::Dash property :bar end foo = Foo.new(bar: 'baz') #=> {:bar=>"baz"} qux = { **foo, quux: 'corge' } #=> {:bar=> "baz", :quux=>"corge"} qux.is_a?(Foo) #=> true qux[:quux] #=> raise NoMethodError, "The property 'quux' is not defined for Foo." qux.key?(:quux) #=> true
You can work around this problem in two ways:
- Call
#to_h
on the resulting object to convert it into a Hash. - Use the double-splat operator on the Dash as the last argument in the Hash literal. This will cause the resulting object to be a Hash instead of a Dash, thereby circumventing the problem.
qux = { **foo, quux: 'corge' }.to_h #=> {:bar=> "baz", :quux=>"corge"} qux.is_a?(Hash) #=> true qux[:quux] #=> "corge" qux = { quux: 'corge', **foo } #=> {:quux=>"corge", :bar=> "baz"} qux.is_a?(Hash) #=> true qux[:quux] #=> "corge"
Dash Extension: PropertyTranslation
The Hashie::Extensions::Dash::PropertyTranslation
mixin extends a Dash with
the ability to remap keys from a source hash.
Example from inconsistent APIs
Property translation is useful when you need to read data from another
application – such as a Java API – where the keys are named differently from
Ruby conventions.
class PersonHash < Hashie::Dash include Hashie::Extensions::Dash::PropertyTranslation property :first_name, from: :firstName property :last_name, from: :lastName property :first_name, from: :f_name property :last_name, from: :l_name end person = PersonHash.new(firstName: 'Michael', l_name: 'Bleigh') person[:first_name] #=> 'Michael' person[:last_name] #=> 'Bleigh
Example using translation lambdas
You can also use a lambda to translate the value. This is particularly useful
when you want to ensure the type of data you’re wrapping.
class DataModelHash < Hashie::Dash include Hashie::Extensions::Dash::PropertyTranslation property :id, transform_with: ->(value) { value.to_i } property :created_at, from: :created, with: ->(value) { Time.parse(value) } end model = DataModelHash.new(id: '123', created: '2014-04-25 22:35:28') model.id.class #=> Fixnum model.created_at.class #=> Time
Mash and Rails 4 Strong Parameters
To enable compatibility with Rails 4 use the hashie-forbidden_attributes gem.
Dash Extension: Coercion.
If you want to use Hashie::Extensions::Coercion
together with Dash
then
you may probably want to use Hashie::Extensions::Dash::Coercion
instead.
This extension automatically includes Hashie::Extensions::Coercion
and also adds a convenient :coerce
option to property
so you can define coercion in one line
instead of using property
and coerce_key
separate:
class UserHash < Hashie::Dash include Hashie::Extensions::Coercion property :id property :posts coerce_key :posts, Array[PostHash] end
This is the same as:
class UserHash < Hashie::Dash include Hashie::Extensions::Dash::Coercion property :id property :posts, coerce: Array[PostHash] end
Trash
A Trash is a Dash that allows you to translate keys on initialization. It mixes
in the PropertyTranslation mixin by default and is used like so:
class Person < Hashie::Trash property :first_name, from: :firstName end
This will automatically translate the firstName key to first_name
when it is initialized using a hash such as through:
Person.new(firstName: 'Bob')
Trash also supports translations using lambda, this could be useful when dealing with external API’s. You can use it in this way:
class Result < Hashie::Trash property :id, transform_with: lambda { |v| v.to_i } property :created_at, from: :creation_date, with: lambda { |v| Time.parse(v) } end
this will produce the following
result = Result.new(id: '123', creation_date: '2012-03-30 17:23:28') result.id.class # => Fixnum result.created_at.class # => Time
Clash
Clash is a Chainable Lazy Hash that allows you to easily construct complex hashes using method notation chaining. This will allow you to use a more action-oriented approach to building options hashes.
Essentially, a Clash is a generalized way to provide much of the same kind of “chainability” that libraries like Arel or Rails 2.x’s named_scopes provide.
Example:
c = Hashie::Clash.new c.where(abc: 'def').order(:created_at) c # => { where: { abc: 'def' }, order: :created_at } # You can also use bang notation to chain into sub-hashes, # jumping back up the chain with _end! c = Hashie::Clash.new c.where!.abc('def').ghi(123)._end!.order(:created_at) c # => { where: { abc: 'def', ghi: 123 }, order: :created_at } # Multiple hashes are merged automatically c = Hashie::Clash.new c.where(abc: 'def').where(hgi: 123) c # => { where: { abc: 'def', hgi: 123 } }
Rash
Rash is a Hash whose keys can be Regexps or Ranges, which will map many input keys to a value.
A good use case for the Rash is an URL router for a web framework, where URLs need to be mapped to actions; the Rash’s keys match URL patterns, while the values call the action which handles the URL.
If the Rash’s value is a proc
, the proc
will be automatically called with the regexp’s MatchData (matched groups) as a block argument.
Example:
# Mapping names to appropriate greetings greeting = Hashie::Rash.new( /^Mr./ => "Hello sir!", /^Mrs./ => "Evening, madame." ) greeting["Mr. Steve Austin"] # => "Hello sir!" greeting["Mrs. Steve Austin"] # => "Evening, madame." # Mapping statements to saucy retorts mapper = Hashie::Rash.new( /I like (.+)/ => proc { |m| "Who DOESN'T like #{m[1]}?!" }, /Get off my (.+)!/ => proc { |m| "Forget your #{m[1]}, old man!" } ) mapper["I like traffic lights"] # => "Who DOESN'T like traffic lights?!" mapper["Get off my lawn!"] # => "Forget your lawn, old man!"
Auto-optimized
Note: The Rash is automatically optimized every 500 accesses (which means that it sorts the list of Regexps, putting the most frequently matched ones at the beginning).
If this value is too low or too high for your needs, you can tune it by setting: rash.optimize_every = n
.
Contributing
See CONTRIBUTING.md
Copyright
Copyright © 2009-2014 Intridea, Inc. (http://intridea.com/) and contributors.
MIT License. See LICENSE for details.