OpenStruct subclass that returns nested hash attributes as RecursiveOpenStructs.
It allows for hashes within hashes to be called in a chain of methods:
ros = RecursiveOpenStruct.new( { fooa: { foob: 'fooc' } } ) ros.fooa.foob # => 'fooc'
Also, if needed, nested hashes can still be accessed as hashes:
ros.fooa_as_a_hash # { foob: 'fooc' }
RecursiveOpenStruct can also optionally recurse across arrays, although you have to explicitly enable it:
h = { :somearr => [ { name: 'a'}, { name: 'b' } ] } ros = RecursiveOpenStruct.new(h, recurse_over_arrays: true ) ros.somearr[0].name # => 'a' ros.somearr[1].name # => 'b'
Also, by default it will turn all hash keys into symbols internally:
h = { 'fear' => 'is', 'the' => 'mindkiller' } } ros = RecursiveOpenStruct.new(h) ros.to_h # => { fear: 'is', the: 'mindkiller' }
You can preserve the original keys by enabling
:preserve_original_keys
:
h = { 'fear' => 'is', 'the' => 'mindkiller' } } ros = RecursiveOpenStruct.new(h, preserve_original_keys: true) ros.to_h # => { 'fear' => 'is', 'the' => 'mindkiller' }
Available as a gem in rubygems, the default gem repository.
If you use bundler, just throw that in your gemfile :
gem 'recursive-open-struct'
You may also install the gem manually :
gem install recursive-open-struct
Fork the project.
Make your feature addition or bug fix.
Add tests for your new or changed functionality. Make sure the tests you add provide clean and clear explanation of the feature.
Send me a pull request. Bonus points for topic branches.
Copyright © 2009-2016, The Recursive-open-struct developers (given in the file AUTHORS.txt). See LICENSE.txt for details.