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What exactly is `&:capitalize` in Ruby?

Tags:

syntax

ruby

I just read this answer Converting upper-case string into title-case using Ruby.

There is the following line of code

"abc".split(/(\W)/).map(&:capitalize).join

What exactly is &:capitalize? Before I had put this into irb myself, I would have told you, it's not valid ruby syntax. It must be some kind of Proc object, because Array#map normaly takes a block. But it isn't. If I put it into irb alone, I get syntax error, unexpected tAMPER.

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johannes Avatar asked Nov 24 '09 20:11

johannes


2 Answers

foo(&a_proc_object) turns a_proc_object into a block and calls foo with that block.

foo(&not_a_proc_object) calls to_proc on not_a_proc_object and then turns the proc object returned by to_proc into a block and calls foo with that block.

In ruby 1.8.7+ and active support Symbol#to_proc is defined to return a proc which calls the method named by the symbol on the argument to the proc.

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sepp2k Avatar answered Oct 05 '22 13:10

sepp2k


It's Symbol#to_proc: see http://pragdave.pragprog.com/pragdave/2005/11/symbolto_proc.html

map(&:capitalize) is exactly the same as map { |x| x.capitalize }.

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Grandpa Avatar answered Oct 05 '22 11:10

Grandpa