DigDeep will look up key/value pairs in a nested hash by a given key. It will recursively dig each nested object and return all matching key/values.
Ruby's dig method can perform similar tasks, but you need to specify the path to the target key.
With this gem, you will only need to specify the target key and it will do the digging.
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'dig-deep'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install dig-deep
$ bundle exec rspec spec
Given the following hash:
data = {
a: {
b: {
c: "abc"
}
}
}
Ruby .dig
:
data.dig(:a, :b, :c) // "abc"
With DigDeep:
require 'dig-deep'
data.dig_deep(:c) // "abc"
Dig up all :email
from arrays of objects
data = {
contacts: [{
name: "John",
email: "john@example.com"
}, {
name: "Mary",
email: "mary@example.com"
}],
work: {
contacts: [{
name: "ACME Corp.",
email: "acme@example.com"
}, {
name: "Asdf Inc.",
email: "asdf@example.com"
}]
}
}
require 'dig-deep'
data.dig_deep(:email) // ["john@example.com", "mary@example.com", "acme@example.com", "asdf@example.com"]
Object with boolean, string, array...
data = {
:l1 => {
:l2 => {
:l3 => {
:l4a => "Level 4",
:l4b => {
:l5a => false,
:l5b => {
:l6 => ["apple", "orange"]
}
}
}
}
},
:l7 => true,
:l8 => {
:l9 => 9876
}
}
require 'dig-deep'
data.dig_deep(:l4a) // "Level 4"
data.dig_deep(:l5a) // false
data.dig_deep(:l6) // ["apple", "orange"]
data.dig_deep(:l9) // 9876
data.dig_deep(:xyz) // nil (returns nil when key is not found)
Object with symbol and string keys
data = {
:email => "email+1@example.com",
:level1 => {
"email" => "email+2@example.com"
}
}
require 'dig-deep'
data.dig_deep(:email) // ["email+1@example.com", "email+2@example.com"]
data.dig_deep('email') // ["email+1@example.com", "email+2@example.com"]
Fork it, create your new branch, push and create a pull request.
The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.