So say I have a Question model and an Answer model and Question has_many Answers (it's a multiple choice question).
Suppose开发者_运维知识库 that questions is a collection of Question objects.
In order to collect all the answers I can do this:
questions.collect(&:answers)
Two questions:
What precisely does this syntax mean? Does it expand to
questions.collect { |q| q.answers }
or is there something else going on here?
Is there a way to do
questions.collect { |q| q.answers.shuffle }
using the same syntax?
collect(&:answers.shuffle)
isn't doing it.
I can't seem to find this in tutorials on ruby blocks on the web and searching for it doesn't work (search engines ignore "&:"). I found it in some inherited code.
Thanks
Yes, the first question is N-duplicated, but regarding the second: no, you cannot chain methods. However, nothing stops you -other than writing code that may puzzle people- to create your own tool:
class Symbol
def to_proc
proc do |obj|
self.to_s.split(/\./).inject(obj, :send)
end
end
end
p ["1", "2", "3"].map(&:"to_i.succ")
# [2, 3, 4]
You can even find ways to send arguments, though it won't probably be very beautiful.
You can choose between either
questions.collect { |q| q.answers.shuffle }
and the one from @tokland. Your code will give you and other developers code readability and toklands solution will give you easy access. If you are going to use this pattern too often then override the to_proc method. Else use the hard way and don't play with nature.
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