Is there a built in function or convention for when you want to do combinations of states concisely?

Given the following:

{
  animal: [:dog, :cat],
  disposition: [:grumpy, :hungry, :sleepy]
}

I want to make:

[
  {animal: :dog, disposition: :grumpy},
  {animal: :dog, disposition: :hungry},
  {animal: :dog, disposition: :sleepy},
  {animal: :cat, disposition: :grumpy},
  {animal: :cat, disposition: :hungry},
  {animal: :cat, disposition: :sleepy}
]

taking any number of input states, i.e. more than 2.

Others must have solved this before me in an elegant fashion?

Python has an array way of doing it here

有帮助吗?

解决方案 2

This SO answer should work.

[{:animal=>:dog, :disposition=>:grumpy}, {:animal=>:dog, :disposition=>:hungry}, {:animal=>:dog, :disposition=>:sleepy}, {:animal=>:cat, :disposition=>:grumpy}, {:animal=>:cat, :disposition=>:hungry}, {:animal=>:cat, :disposition=>:sleepy}]

其他提示

intial hash:

a={  
  animal: [:dog, :cat],  
  disposition: [:grumpy, :hungry, :sleepy]  
}  
b= a[:animal].product(a[:disposition]).collect do |c|
  {animal: c[0], disposition: c[1]}
end
许可以下: CC-BY-SA归因
不隶属于 StackOverflow
scroll top