stream.concat_map(function) → stream array.concat_map(function) → array
Concatenate one or more elements into a single sequence using a mapping function.
concat_map
works in a similar fashion to map, applying the given function to each element in a sequence, but it will always return a single sequence. If the mapping function returns a sequence, map
would produce a sequence of sequences:
r.expr([1, 2, 3]).map { |x| [x, x.mul(2)] }.run(conn)
Result:
[[1, 2], [2, 4], [3, 6]]
Whereas concat_map
with the same mapping function would merge those sequences into one:
r.expr([1, 2, 3]).concat_map { |x| [x, x.mul(2)] }.run(conn)
Result:
[1, 2, 2, 4, 3, 6]
The return value, array or stream, will be the same type as the input.
Example: Construct a sequence of all monsters defeated by Marvel heroes. The field “defeatedMonsters” is an array of one or more monster names.
r.table('marvel').concat_map { |hero| hero[:defeated_monsters] }.run(conn)
Example: Simulate an eq_join using concat_map
. (This is how ReQL joins are implemented internally.)
r.table('posts').concat_map { |post| r.table('comments').get_all( post['id'], :index => 'post_id' ).map { |comment| { :left => post, :right => comment} } }.run(conn)
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