From: "bitsweat (Jeremy Kemper)" <jeremy@...> Date: 2012-11-08T03:48:46+09:00 Subject: [ruby-core:49058] [ruby-trunk - Feature #7297] map_to alias for each_with_object Issue #7297 has been updated by bitsweat (Jeremy Kemper). John, I have a bit of usage like that. Consider that `collection.map { |element| [key, value] }.associate` handles that cleanly. In my code survey, nearly all my uses of Hash[] and #inject are covered by #associate - associating an collection of keys with calculated values. For more complex scenarios, using more verbose, powerful API like #inject, #each_with_object, or #map + #associate feels appropriate. ---------------------------------------- Feature #7297: map_to alias for each_with_object https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/7297#change-32584 Author: nathan.f77 (Nathan Broadbent) Status: Rejected Priority: Normal Assignee: Category: lib Target version: 2.0.0 I would love to have a shorter alias for 'each_with_object', and would like to propose 'map_to'. Here are my arguments: * It reads logically and clearly: [1, 2, 3].map_to({}) {|i, hash| hash[i] = i ** 2 } #=> {1 => 1, 2 => 4, 3 => 9} * Rubyists are already using 'map' to build and return an array, so it should be obvious that 'map_to(object)' can be used to build and return an object. * Given that 'each' and 'each_with_index' return the original array, I feel that the 'each_with_object' method name is slightly counterintuitive. 'map_to' might not be 100% semantically correct, but it's obvious that it will return something other than the original array. * Many people (myself included) were using inject({}) {|hash, el| ... ; hash } instead of 'each_with_object', partly because of ignorance, but also because 'each_with_object' is so long. 'map_to' is the same length as inject, and means that you don't have to return the object at the end of the block. * Only a single line of code is needed to implement the alias. Best, Nathan -- http://bugs.ruby-lang.org/