From: "mame (Yusuke Endoh)" <mame@...> Date: 2012-04-27T03:21:39+09:00 Subject: [ruby-core:44661] [ruby-trunk - Feature #6367][Assigned] #same? for Enumerable Issue #6367 has been updated by mame (Yusuke Endoh). Status changed from Open to Assigned Assignee set to matz (Yukihiro Matsumoto) Personally I don't think it is a good name. It looks a kind of comparison operator. -- Yusuke Endoh <mame@tsg.ne.jp> ---------------------------------------- Feature #6367: #same? for Enumerable https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/6367#change-26228 Author: prijutme4ty (Ilya Vorontsov) Status: Assigned Priority: Normal Assignee: matz (Yukihiro Matsumoto) Category: Target version: I realised that I frequently test if all objects in enumerable have the same feature. For example if all words have the same length (but not defined before). So I found particulary useful method Enumerable#same_by? that test this behaviour. I think it can be simply rewritten in C and included to Enumerable core methods. Simple ruby implementation can be written just in a pair of lines (tests included): module Enumerable def same?(&block) return true if empty? if block_given? first_result = yield(first) all?{|el| first_result == yield(el)} else first_result = first all?{|el| first_result == el} end end end require 'test/unit' class TestEnumerableSame < Test::Unit::TestCase def test_same assert_equal(true, [1,3,9,7].same?(&:even?)) assert_equal(true, [4,8,2,2].same?(&:even?)) assert_equal(false, [1,8,3,2].same?(&:even?)) assert_equal(true, %w{cat dog rat}.same?(&:length)) assert_equal(false, %w{cat dog rabbit}.same?(&:length)) assert_equal(true, %w{cat cat cat}.same?) assert_equal(false, %w{cat dog rat}.same?) assert_equal(true, [].same?(&:length)) assert_equal(true, [].same?) end end -- http://bugs.ruby-lang.org/