Ruby has a helper method for Hash that lets you treat a Hash as if it was inverted (in essence, by letting you access keys through values):
{a: 1, b: 2, c: 3}.key(1)
=> :a
If you want to keep the inverted hash, then Hash#invert should work for most situations:
{a: 1, b: 2, c: 3}.invert
=> {1=>:a, 2=>:b, 3=>:c}
BUT...
If you have duplicate values, invert
will discard all but the last occurrence of your values (because it will keep replacing new value for that key during iteration). Likewise, key
will only return the first match:
{a: 1, b: 2, c: 2}.key(2)
=> :b
{a: 1, b: 2, c: 2}.invert
=> {1=>:a, 2=>:c}
So, if your values are unique you can use Hash#invert
. If not, then you can keep all the values as an array, like this:
class Hash
# like invert but not lossy
# {"one"=>1,"two"=>2, "1"=>1, "2"=>2}.inverse => {1=>["one", "1"], 2=>["two", "2"]}
def safe_invert
each_with_object({}) do |(key,value),out|
out[value] ||= []
out[value] << key
end
end
end
Note: This code with tests is now on GitHub.
Or:
class Hash
def safe_invert
self.each_with_object({}){|(k,v),o|(o[v]||=[])<<k}
end
end