Is there and way to write code like this in a way that makes what it does clearer?
a = (a.split(" ")开发者_如何学运维[1..-1]).join(" ")
That deletes the first word of a sentence but the code doesn't look expressive at all.
irb(main):024:0> "this is a test".split.drop(1) * " "
=> "is a test"
Edited to add:
Explanation:
By default
#split
delimits on whitespace.
#drop(1)
gets rid of the first entry.
* " "
does the same as#join(" ")
.
for somebody who is used to reading rexep this is pretty clean:
a = a.sub(/^\S+\s/, "")
ymmv
code
a = a.split[1..-1] * " "
explanation
String#split
's default parameter is " "
Array * String
is an alias for Array.join(String)
On second thought, I'm not sure if it's more transparent to someone who is not familiar with ruby, per se. But anyone who has worked with Ruby strings for a little bit will understand what's going on. And it's a lot more clean than the original version.
UPDATE
As per just-my-correct-opinion's answer (which you all should vote up instead of mine), if you are running Ruby 1.9.1 (which you should be, anyway) or Ruby 1.8.7, you can do:
a = a.split.drop(1) * " "
maybe making the process explicit will help
words = a.split
words.pop
a = words.join " "
And if you were using this throughout some code you might want to create the methods in String and Array to make your code readable. (works in 1.8.6 too)
class String
def words
split
end
end
class Array
def but_first
self[1..-1]
end
def to_sentence
join(' ')
end
end
str = "And, this is a sentence"
puts str.words.but_first.to_sentence
Something like following
a = a[a.index(' '), a.length-(a.index(' ')+1)]
No check though
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