This is more a Ruby than a Rails question – feel free to redirect me
as appropriate – but either this is a Ruby 1.9 bug or I have some
serious misunderstanding. Essentially, I’ve caught the <=> operator
returning nil – not -1, 0, or 1, but nil. Schematically:
class A
attr_accessor :slot
fun matches?(s)
p “s <=> @slot = #{s <=> @slot}”
return (s <=> @slot) == 0
end
end
Driven from a script, I get something like this:
Case 1: Notice that <=> evaluates to nil when it should eval to 0
a.slot = “dog”
a.matches?(“dog”)
"s <=> @slot = "
=> false
Case 2: When I pass a String.new(“dog”) everything works
a.slot = “dog”
a.matches?(String.new(“dog”))
“s <=> @slot = 0”
=> true
What’s really odd is that called interactively, Case 1 works as
expected. When called from a script, it exhibits the oddity above.
Am I missing something fundamental about Ruby and string comparison?
fearless_fool wrote:
This is more a Ruby than a Rails question – feel free to redirect me
as appropriate – but either this is a Ruby 1.9 bug or I have some
serious misunderstanding. Essentially, I’ve caught the <=> operator
returning nil – not -1, 0, or 1, but nil. Schematically:
class A
attr_accessor :slot
fun matches?(s)
p “s <=> @slot = #{s <=> @slot}”
return (s <=> @slot) == 0
end
end
Driven from a script, I get something like this:
Case 1: Notice that <=> evaluates to nil when it should eval to 0
a.slot = “dog”
a.matches?(“dog”)
"s <=> @slot = "
=> false
Case 2: When I pass a String.new(“dog”) everything works
a.slot = “dog”
a.matches?(String.new(“dog”))
“s <=> @slot = 0”
=> true
What’s really odd is that called interactively, Case 1 works as
expected. When called from a script, it exhibits the oddity above.
Am I missing something fundamental about Ruby and string comparison?
Can’t reproduce with what you’ve given.
ruby-1.9.1-p376 > class A
ruby-1.9.1-p376 ?> attr_accessor :slot
ruby-1.9.1-p376 ?> def matches? s
ruby-1.9.1-p376 ?> puts “s <=> @slot = #{s <=> @slot}”
ruby-1.9.1-p376 ?> (s <=> @slot) == 0
ruby-1.9.1-p376 ?> end
ruby-1.9.1-p376 ?> end
=> nil
ruby-1.9.1-p376 > a = A.new
=> #<A:0x000000041915b8>
ruby-1.9.1-p376 > a.slot = “dog”
=> “dog”
ruby-1.9.1-p376 > a.matches? “dog”
s <=> @slot = 0
=> true
ruby-1.9.1-p376 >
String comparison via <=> to nil will return nil. Are you entirely sure
that in your IRB session your object’s @slot isn’t nil for some reason?
You’ll want to hit the ruby-talk list with this question.
On Feb 10, 2010 7:58 PM, “fearless_fool” [email protected] wrote:
This is more a Ruby than a Rails question – feel free to redirect me
as appropriate – but either this is a Ruby 1.9 bug or I have some
serious misunderstanding. Essentially, I’ve caught the <=> operator
returning nil – not -1, 0, or 1, but nil. Schematically:
class A
attr_accessor :slot
fun matches?(s)
p “s <=> @slot = #{s <=> @slot}”
return (s <=> @slot) == 0
end
end
Driven from a script, I get something like this:
Case 1: Notice that <=> evaluates to nil when it should eval to 0
a.slot = “dog”
a.matches?(“dog”)
"s <=> @slot = "
=> false
Case 2: When I pass a String.new(“dog”) everything works
a.slot = “dog”
a.matches?(String.new(“dog”))
“s <=> @slot = 0”
=> true
What’s really odd is that called interactively, Case 1 works as
expected. When called from a script, it exhibits the oddity above.
Am I missing something fundamental about Ruby and string comparison?
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On 11 February 2010 00:57, fearless_fool [email protected] wrote:
Essentially, I’ve caught the <=> operator
returning nil – not -1, 0, or 1, but nil. Schematically:
Do you need the <=> operator? (specifically, nothing you’re doing
seems to care whether the compared string is bigger or smaller, only
different. So why not use != instead?
In fact, your matches? method could just as easily be:
def matches?(s)
s == @slot
end
which will return true if they’re equal, or nil if they’re not. If it
has to be true/false, then use !!(s == @slot)
ruby-1.9.1-p376 > a = A.new
=> #<A:0x000000041915b8>
ruby-1.9.1-p376 > a.slot = “dog”
=> “dog”
ruby-1.9.1-p376 > a.matches? “dog”
s <=> @slot = 0
=> true
ruby-1.9.1-p376 >
String comparison via <=> to nil will return nil. Are you entirely sure
that in your IRB session your object’s @slot isn’t nil for some reason?
First, yep, 100% sure that @slot wasn’t nil – I printed it out upon
entering the matches? method. (FWIW, you have it reversed: irb
session worked fine. Driven from a script failed.) Sadly, my
attempts to prune down the example to a reproducible losing case have
failed to fail, so to speak. As suggested by @Matt Brown, I’ll take
this over to the ruby-talk list.
Thanks.