I'm currently reading Agile Web Development With Rails, 3rd edition. On page 672, I came across this method:
def capitalize_words(string)
string.gsub(/\b\w/) { $&.upcase }
end
What is the code in the block doing? I have never seen that syntax. Is it similar to the arr开发者_运维技巧ay.map(&:some_method)
syntax?
It's Title Casing The Input. inside the block, $& is a built-in representing the current match (\b\w i.e. the first letter of each word) which is then uppercased.
You've touched on one of the few things I don't like about Ruby :)
The magic variable $& contains the matched string from the previous successful pattern match. So in this case, it'll be the first character of each word.
This is mentioned in the RDoc for String.gsub:
http://ruby-doc.org/core/classes/String.html#M000817
gsub
replaces everything that matched in the regex with the result of the block. so yes, in this case you're matching the first letter of words, then replacing it with the upcased version.
as to the slightly bizarre syntax inside the block, this is equivalent (and perhaps easier to understand):
def capitalize_words(string)
string.gsub(/\b\w/) {|x| x.upcase}
end
or even slicker:
def capitalize_words(string)
string.gsub /\b\w/, &:upcase
end
as to the regex (courtesy the pickaxe book), \b
matches a word boundary, and \w
any 'word character' (alphanumerics and underscore). so \b\w
matches the first character of the word.
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