I'm trying to build an API wrapper gem, and having issues with converting hash keys to a more Rubyish format from the JSON the API returns.
The JSON contains multiple layers of nesting, both Hashes and Arrays. What I want to do is to recursively convert all keys to snake_case for easier use.
Here's what I've got so far:
def convert_hash_keys(value)
return value if (not value.is_a?(Array) and not value.is_a?(Hash))
result = value.inject({}) do |new, (key, value)|
new[to_snake_case(key.to_s).to_sym] = convert_hash_keys(value)
new
end
result
end
The above calls this method to convert strings to snake_case:
def to_snake_case(string)
string.gsub(/::/, '/').
gsub(/([A-Z]+)([A-Z][a-z])/,'\1_\2').
gsub(/([a-z\d])([A-Z])/,'\1_\2').
tr("-", "_").
downcase
end
Ideally, the result would be similar to the following:
hash = {:HashKey => {:NestedHashKey => [{:Key => "value"}]}}
convert_hash_keys(hash)
# => {:hash_key => {:nested_hash_key => [{:key => "value"}]}}
I'm getting the recursion wrong, and every version of this sort of solution I've tried either doesn't convert symbols beyond the first level, or goes overboard and tries to convert the entire hash, including values.
Trying to solve all this in a helper class, rather than modifying the actual Hash and String functions, if possible.
Thank you in advance.
If you're using the active_support library, you can use deep_transform_keys! like so:
The accepted answer by 'mu is too short' has been converted into a gem, futurechimp's Plissken:
https://github.com/futurechimp/plissken/blob/master/lib/plissken/ext/hash/to_snake_keys.rb
This looks like it should work outside of Rails as the underscore functionality is included.
You need to treat Array and Hash separately. And, if you're in Rails, you can use
underscore
instead of your homebrewto_snake_case
. First a little helper to reduce the noise:If your Hashes will have keys that aren't Symbols or Strings then you can modify
underscore_key
appropriately.If you have an Array, then you just want to recursively apply
convert_hash_keys
to each element of the Array; if you have a Hash, you want to fix the keys withunderscore_key
and applyconvert_hash_keys
to each of the values; if you have something else then you want to pass it through untouched:If you use Rails:
Example with hash: camelCase to snake_case:
source: http://apidock.com/rails/v4.0.2/Hash/transform_keys
For nested attributes use deep_transform_keys instead of transform_keys, example:
source: http://apidock.com/rails/v4.2.7/Hash/deep_transform_keys