Reputation: 34338
Here is my code snippet:
something_1.each do |i|
something_2.each do |j|
Data.each do |data|
date = data.attribute('TIME_PERIOD').text
value = data.attribute('OBS_VALUE').text
date_value_hash[date] = value
end
end
end
I want to capture all the values in a single date. date is the key of my hash and it may have multiple values for a single date. How can I accomplish that here? When I am using this line:
date_value_hash[date] = value
values are getting replaced each time the loop iterates. But, I want to accumulate all the values in my date_value_hash for each dates i.e. I want to build the values dynamically.
Currently I am getting this:
{"1990"=>"1", "1994"=>"2", "1998"=>"0"}
But, I want something like this:
{"1990"=>"1,2,3,4,5,6", "1994"=>"1,2,3,4,5,6", "1998"=>"1,2,3,4,5,6"}
Anyone have any idea how can I accomplish that?
Upvotes: 2
Views: 273
Reputation:
Another approach of building multi-valued hash in Ruby:
h = {}
(h[:key] ||= []) << "value 1"
(h[:key] ||= []) << "value 2"
puts h
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 27793
Like this
magic = Hash.new{|h,k|h[k]=[]}
magic["1990"] << "A"
magic["1990"] << "B"
magic["1994"] << "C"
magic["1998"] << "D"
magic["1994"] << "F"
after which magic
is
{"1998"=>["D"], "1994"=>["C", "F"], "1990"=>["A", "B"]}
and if you need the values as comma separated string (as indicated by your sample data), you'll just access them as
magic['1990'].join(',')
which yields
"A,B"
if later you want to pass magic
around and preventing it from automagically creating keys, just wrap it as follows
hash = Hash.new.update(magic)
Hope that helps!
Upvotes: 5