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mcmire -
April 8, 2009
ColinDKelley -
October 26, 2012 - (<= v3.2.8)
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Superclass of OrderedHash
Note that in Rails 2.3, OrderedHash changed from being a subclass of Array to a subclass of Hash. This is contrary to what the documentation says above.
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is now a subclass of Hash that preserves order (or _is_ a Hash if running Ruby 1.9 or greater)
You might not realize it preserves order because it delegates inspect to its super-class, Hash, which doesn’t preserve order. But you will see that order is preserved if you iterate or use the keys or values methods:
>> names = ['Amy Irving', 'Jane Doe', 'John Doe', 'John Updike', 'Susan Anthony'] >> ordered = names.group_by { |name| name.split.first } => #<OrderedHash {"John"=>["John Doe", "John Updike"], "Amy"=>["Amy Irving"], "Susan"=>["Susan Anthony"], "Jane"=>["Jane Doe"]}> # (note that the inspect above is in undefined order) >> ordered.keys # will be ordered properly => ["Amy", "Jane", "John", "Susan"] >> ordered.each { |first, full| puts first; full.each { |name| puts " #{name}" } } # will be ordered properly Amy Amy Irving Jane Jane Doe John John Doe John Updike Susan Susan Anthony