A named tuple is a fixed-size, immutable, stack-allocated mapping of a fixed set of keys to values.
You can think of a NamedTuple
as an immutable Hash
whose keys (which are of type Symbol
), and the types for each key, are known at compile time.
A named tuple can be created with a named tuple literal:
language = {name: "Crystal", year: 2011} # NamedTuple(name: String, year: Int32) language[:name] # => "Crystal" language[:year] # => 2011 language[:other] # compile time error
The compiler knows what types are in each key, so when indexing a named tuple with a symbol literal the compiler will return the value for that key and with the expected type, like in the above snippet. Indexing with a symbol literal for which there's no key will give a compile-time error.
Indexing with a symbol that is only known at runtime will return a value whose type is the union of all the types in the named tuple, and might raise KeyError
.
Creates a named tuple from the given hash, with elements casted to the given types.
Creates a named tuple that will contain the given arguments.
Returns the types of this named tuple type.
Returns true
if this tuple has the same keys as other, and values for each key are the same in self
and other.
Returns true
if this tuple has the same keys as other, and values for each key are the same in self
and other.
Returns the value for the given key, if there's such key, otherwise raises KeyError
.
Returns the value for the given key, if there's such key, otherwise returns nil
.
Returns a named tuple with the same keys but with cloned values, using the #clone
method.
Traverses the depth of a structure and returns the value, otherwise raises KeyError
.
Traverses the depth of a structure and returns the value.
Yields each key and value in this named tuple.
Yields each key in this named tuple.
Yields each value in this named tuple.
Yields each key and value, together with an index starting at offset, in this named tuple.
Returns true
if this named tuple is empty.
Returns the value for the given key, if there's such key, otherwise returns default_value.
Returns the value for the given key, if there's such key, otherwise the value returned by the block.
Returns the value for the given key, if there's such key, otherwise the value returned by the block.
Expects to be called on a named tuple whose values are types, creates a tuple from the given hash, with types casted appropriately.
Returns true
if this named tuple has the given key, false
otherwise.
Returns true
if this named tuple has the given key, false
otherwise.
Returns a hash value based on this name tuple's size, keys and values.
Same as #to_s
.
Returns a Tuple
of symbols with the keys in this named tuple.
Returns an Array
populated with the results of each iteration in the given block, which is given each key and value in this named tuple.
Merges two named tuples into one, returning a new named tuple.
Merges two named tuples into one, returning a new named tuple.
Returns the number of elements in this named tuple.
Returns a Tuple
of symbols with the keys in this named tuple, sorted by name.
Returns a new Array
of tuples populated with each key-value pair.
Returns a Hash
with the keys and values in this named tuple.
Appends a string representation of this named tuple to the given IO
.
Returns a Tuple
with the values in this named tuple.
Value
Object
Object
Creates a named tuple from the given hash, with elements casted to the given types. Here the Int32 | String union is cast to Int32.
num_or_str = 42.as(Int32 | String) NamedTuple(name: String, val: Int32).from({"name" => "number", "val" => num_or_str}) # => {name: "number", val: 42} num_or_str = "a string".as(Int32 | String) NamedTuple(name: String, val: Int32).from({"name" => "number", "val" => num_or_str}) # raises TypeCastError (cast from String to Int32 failed)
See also: #from
.
Creates a named tuple that will contain the given arguments.
With a named tuple literal you cannot create an empty named tuple. This method doesn't have this limitation, which makes it especially useful in macros and generic code.
NamedTuple.new(name: "Crystal", year: 2011) #=> {name: "Crystal", year: 2011} NamedTuple.new # => {} {} # syntax error
Returns the types of this named tuple type.
tuple = {a: 1, b: "hello", c: 'x'} tuple.class.types # => {a: Int32, b: String, c: Char}
Returns true
if this tuple has the same keys as other, and values for each key are the same in self
and other.
tuple1 = {name: "Crystal", year: 2011} tuple2 = {year: 2011, name: "Crystal"} tuple3 = {name: "Crystal", year: 2012} tuple4 = {name: "Crystal", year: 2011.0} tuple1 == tuple2 # => true tuple1 == tuple3 # => false tuple1 == tuple4 # => true
Returns true
if this tuple has the same keys as other, and values for each key are the same in self
and other.
tuple1 = {name: "Crystal", year: 2011} tuple2 = {year: 2011, name: "Crystal"} tuple3 = {name: "Crystal", year: 2012} tuple4 = {name: "Crystal", year: 2011.0} tuple1 == tuple2 # => true tuple1 == tuple3 # => false tuple1 == tuple4 # => true
Returns the value for the given key, if there's such key, otherwise raises KeyError
.
tuple = {name: "Crystal", year: 2011} key = :name tuple[key] # => "Crystal" key = "year" tuple[key] # => 2011 key = :other tuple[key] # raises KeyError
Returns the value for the given key, if there's such key, otherwise returns nil
.
tuple = {name: "Crystal", year: 2011} key = :name tuple[key]? # => "Crystal" key = "year" tuple[key] # => 2011 key = :other tuple[key]? # => nil
Returns a named tuple with the same keys but with cloned values, using the #clone
method.
Traverses the depth of a structure and returns the value, otherwise raises KeyError
.
h = {a: {b: [10, 20, 30]}} h.dig "a", "b" # => [10, 20, 30] h.dig "a", "b", "c", "d", "e" # raises KeyError
Traverses the depth of a structure and returns the value. Returns nil
if not found.
h = {a: {b: [10, 20, 30]}} h.dig? "a", "b" # => [10, 20, 30] h.dig? "a", "b", "c", "d", "e" # => nil
Yields each key and value in this named tuple.
tuple = {name: "Crystal", year: 2011} tuple.each do |key, value| puts "#{key} = #{value}" end
Output:
name = Crystal year = 2011
Yields each key in this named tuple.
tuple = {name: "Crystal", year: 2011} tuple.each_key do |key| puts key end
Output:
name year
Yields each value in this named tuple.
tuple = {name: "Crystal", year: 2011} tuple.each_value do |value| puts value end
Output:
Crystal 2011
Yields each key and value, together with an index starting at offset, in this named tuple.
tuple = {name: "Crystal", year: 2011} tuple.each_with_index do |key, value, i| puts "#{i + 1}) #{key} = #{value}" end
Output:
1) name = Crystal 2) year = 2011
Returns true
if this named tuple is empty.
tuple = {name: "Crystal", year: 2011} tuple.empty? # => false
Returns the value for the given key, if there's such key, otherwise returns default_value.
tuple = {name: "Crystal", year: 2011} tuple.fetch(:name, "Unknown") # => "Crystal" tuple.fetch("year", 0) # => 2011 tuple.fetch(:other, 0) # => 0
Returns the value for the given key, if there's such key, otherwise the value returned by the block.
tuple = {name: "Crystal", year: 2011} tuple.fetch(:name) { "Unknown" } # => "Crystal" tuple.fetch(:other) { 0 } # => 0
Returns the value for the given key, if there's such key, otherwise the value returned by the block.
tuple = {name: "Crystal", year: 2011} tuple.fetch("name") { "Unknown" } # => "Crystal" tuple.fetch("other") { 0 } # => 0
Expects to be called on a named tuple whose values are types, creates a tuple from the given hash, with types casted appropriately. The hash keys must be either symbols or strings.
This allows you to easily pass a hash as individual named arguments to a method.
require "json" def speak_about(thing : String, n : Int64) "I see #{n} #{thing}s" end hash = JSON.parse(%({"thing": "world", "n": 2})).as_h # hash : Hash(String, JSON::Any) hash = hash.transform_values(&.raw) # hash : Hash(String, JSON::Any::Type) speak_about(**{thing: String, n: Int64}.from(hash)) # => "I see 2 worlds"
Returns true
if this named tuple has the given key, false
otherwise.
tuple = {name: "Crystal", year: 2011} tuple.has_key?(:name) # => true tuple.has_key?(:other) # => false
Returns true
if this named tuple has the given key, false
otherwise.
tuple = {name: "Crystal", year: 2011} tuple.has_key?(:name) # => true tuple.has_key?(:other) # => false
Returns a hash value based on this name tuple's size, keys and values.
See also: Object#hash
. See Object#hash(hasher)
Returns a Tuple
of symbols with the keys in this named tuple.
tuple = {name: "Crystal", year: 2011} tuple.keys # => {:name, :year}
Returns an Array
populated with the results of each iteration in the given block, which is given each key and value in this named tuple.
tuple = {name: "Crystal", year: 2011} tuple.map { |k, v| "#{k}: #{v}" } # => ["name: Crystal", "year: 2011"]
Merges two named tuples into one, returning a new named tuple. If a key is defined in both tuples, the value and its type is used from other.
a = {foo: "Hello", bar: "Old"} b = {bar: "New", baz: "Bye"} a.merge(b) # => {foo: "Hello", bar: "New", baz: "Bye"}
Merges two named tuples into one, returning a new named tuple. If a key is defined in both tuples, the value and its type is used from other.
a = {foo: "Hello", bar: "Old"} b = {bar: "New", baz: "Bye"} a.merge(b) # => {foo: "Hello", bar: "New", baz: "Bye"}
Returns the number of elements in this named tuple.
tuple = {name: "Crystal", year: 2011} tuple.size # => 2
Returns a Tuple
of symbols with the keys in this named tuple, sorted by name.
tuple = {foo: 1, bar: 2, baz: 3} tuple.sorted_keys # => {:bar, :baz, :foo}
Returns a new Array
of tuples populated with each key-value pair.
tuple = {name: "Crystal", year: 2011} tuple.to_a # => [{:name, "Crystal"}, {:year, 2011}]
Returns a Hash
with the keys and values in this named tuple.
tuple = {name: "Crystal", year: 2011} tuple.to_h # => {:name => "Crystal", :year => 2011}
Appends a string representation of this named tuple to the given IO
.
tuple = {name: "Crystal", year: 2011} tuple.to_s # => %({name: "Crystal", year: 2011})
Returns a Tuple
with the values in this named tuple.
tuple = {name: "Crystal", year: 2011} tuple.values # => {"Crystal", 2011}
© 2012–2020 Manas Technology Solutions.
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0.
https://crystal-lang.org/api/0.35.1/NamedTuple.html