Ranges occur everywhere: January to December, 0 to 9, lines 50
through 67, and so on. Ruby supports ranges and allows us to use ranges
in a variety of ways:
Ruby creates these sequences using the ''..'' and ''...'' range operators. The two-dot form creates an inclusive range, while the three-dot form creates a range that excludes the specified high value.
Ranges as Sequences:
The first and perhaps most natural use of ranges is to express a sequence. Sequences have a start point, an end point, and a way to produce successive values in the sequence.Ruby creates these sequences using the ''..'' and ''...'' range operators. The two-dot form creates an inclusive range, while the three-dot form creates a range that excludes the specified high value.
(1..5) #==> 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 (1...5) #==> 1, 2, 3, 4 ('a'..'d') #==> 'a', 'b', 'c', 'd'The sequence 1..100 is held as a Range object containing references to two Fixnum objects. If you need to, you can convert a range to a list using the to_a method. Try the following example:
#!/usr/bin/ruby $, =", " # Array value separator range1 = (1..10).to_a range2 = ('bar'..'bat').to_a puts "#{range1}" puts "#{range2}"This will produce the following result:
[1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10] ["bar", "bas", "bat"]Ranges implement methods that let you iterate over them and test their contents in a variety of ways:
#!/usr/bin/ruby # Assume a range digits = 0..9 puts digits.include?(5) ret = digits.min puts "Min value is #{ret}" ret = digits.max puts "Max value is #{ret}" ret = digits.reject {|i| i < 5 } puts "Rejected values are #{ret}" digits.each do |digit| puts "In Loop #{digit}" endThis will produce the following result:
true Min value is 0 Max value is 9 Rejected values are [5, 6, 7, 8, 9] In Loop 0 In Loop 1 In Loop 2 In Loop 3 In Loop 4 In Loop 5 In Loop 6 In Loop 7 In Loop 8 In Loop 9
Ranges as Conditions:
Ranges may also be used as conditional expressions. For example, the following code fragment prints sets of lines from standard input, where the first line in each set contains the word start and the last line the word end.:while gets print if /start/../end/ endRanges can be used in case statements:
#!/usr/bin/ruby score = 70 result = case score when 0..40 then "Fail" when 41..60 then "Pass" when 61..70 then "Pass with Merit" when 71..100 then "Pass with Distinction" else "Invalid Score" end puts resultThis will produce the following result:
Pass with Merit
Ranges as Intervals:
A final use of the versatile range is as an interval test: seeing if some value falls within the interval represented by the range. This is done using ===, the case equality operator.#!/usr/bin/ruby if ((1..10) === 5) puts "5 lies in (1..10)" end if (('a'..'j') === 'c') puts "c lies in ('a'..'j')" end if (('a'..'j') === 'z') puts "z lies in ('a'..'j')" endThis will produce the following result:
5 lies in (1..10) c lies in ('a'..'j')
No comments:
Post a Comment