Tiny module that allows you to easily adapt from one hash structure to another with a simple declarative DSL.
Maps values from hashes with different structures and/or key names. Ideal for normalizing arbitrary data to be consumed by your applications, or to prepare your data for different display formats (ie. json).
Tiny module that allows you to easily adapt from one hash structure to another with a simple declarative DSL.
It is a module so it doesn't get in the way of your inheritance tree.
class ManyLevels
extend HashMapper
map from('/name'), to('/tag_attributes/name')
map from('/properties/type'), to('/tag_attributes/type')
map from('/tagid'), to('/tag_id')
map from('/properties/egg'), to('/chicken')
end
input = {
:name => 'ismael',
:tagid => 1,
:properties => {
:type => 'BLAH',
:egg => 33
}
}
ManyLevels.normalize(input)
# outputs:
{
:tag_id => 1,
:chicken => 33,
:tag_attributes => {
:name => 'ismael',
:type => 'BLAH'
}
}
HashMapper was primarily written as a way of mapping data structure in json requests to hashes with structures friendlier to our ActiveRecord models:
@article = Article.create( ArticleParams.normalize(params[:weird_article_data]) )
You can use HashMapper in your own little hash-like objects:
class NiceHash
include Enumerable
extend HashMapper
map from('/names/first'), to('/first_name')
map from('/names/last'), to('/last_name')
def initialize(input_hash)
@hash = self.class.normalize(input_hash)
end
def [](k)
@hash[k]
end
def []=(k,v)
@hash[k] = v
end
def each(&block)
@hash.each(&block)
end
end
@user = User.new(NiceHash.new(params))
You want to make sure an incoming value gets converted to a certain type, so
{'one' => '1', 'two' => '2'}
gets translated to
{:one => 1, :two => 2}
Do this:
map from('/one'), to('/one', &:to_i)
map from('/two'), to('/two', &:to_i)
You can pass :to_i, :to_s or anything available method that makes sense. Don't forget the block notation (&).
You guessed it. That means that you can actually pass custom blocks to each to() definition as well. The following is similar to the previous example:
map from('/one), to('/one'){|value| value.to_i}
You want to pass the final value of a key through a custom filter:
{:names => {:first => 'Ismael', :last => 'Celis'}} gets translated to {:user => 'Mr. Celis, Ismael'}
Do this:
map from('/names'), to('/user') do |names|
"Mr. #{names[1]}, #{names[0]}"
end
Cool, you can map one hash into another, but what if I want the opposite operation?
Just use the denormalize() method instead:
input = {:first => 'Mark', :last => 'Evans'}
output = NameMapper.normalize(input) # => {:first_name => 'Mark', :last_name => 'Evans'}
NameMapper.denormalize(output) # => input
This will work with your block filters and even nested mappers (see below).
You want:
{:names => ['Ismael', 'Celis']}
converted to
{:first_name => 'Ismael', :last_name => 'Celis'}
Do this:
map from('/names[0]'), to('/first_name')
map from('/names[1]'), to('/last_name')
You want to map nested structures delegating to different mappers:
From this:
input = {
:project => 'HashMapper',
:url => 'http://github.com/ismasan/hash_mapper',
:author_names => {:first => 'Ismael', :last => 'Celis'}
}
To this:
output = {
:project_name => 'HashMapper',
:url => 'http://github.com/ismasan/hash_mapper',
:author => {:first_name => 'Ismael', :last_name => 'Celis'}
}
Define an UserMapper separate from your ProjectMapper, so you reuse them combined or standalone
class UserMapper
extend HashMapper
map from('/first'), to('/first_name')
map from('/last'), to('/lastt_name')
end
class ProjectMapper
extend HashMapper
map from('/project'), to('/project_name')
map from('/url'), to('/url')
map from('/author_names'), to('/author'), using(UserMapper)
end
Now ProjectMapper will delegate parsing of :author_names to UserMapper
ProjectMapper.normalize( input ) # => output
Let's say you have a CompanyMapper which maps a hash with an array of employees, and you want to reuse UserMapper to map each employee. You could:
class CompanyMapper
map from('/info/name'), to('/company_name')
map form('/info/address'), to('/company_address')
map from('/info/year_founded'), to('year_founded', :to_i)
map from('/employees'), to('employees') do |employees_array|
employees_array.collect {|emp_hash| UserMapper.normalize(emp_hash)}
end
end
But HashMapper's nested mappers will actually do that for you if a value is an array, so:
map from('/employees'), to('employees'), using(UserMapper)
... Will map each employee using UserMapper.
Sometimes you will need some slightly more complex processing on the whole hash, either before or after normalizing/denormalizing.
For this you can use the class methods before_normalize, before_denormalize, after_normalize and after_denormalize.
They all yield a block with 2 arguments - the hash you are mapping from and the hash you are mapping to, e.g.
class EggMapper
map from('/raw'), to('/fried')
before_normalize do |input, output|
input['raw'] ||= 'please' # this will give 'raw' a default value
input
end
after_denormalize do |input, output|
output.to_a # the denormalized object will now be an array, not a hash!!
end
end
Important: note that for before filters, you need to return the (modified) input, and for after filters, you need to return the output. Note also that 'output' is correct at the time of the filter, i.e. before_normalize yields 'output' as an empty hash, while after_normalize yields it as an already normalized hash.
gem install hash_mapper
(The MIT License)
Copyright (c) 2009 Ismael Celis
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The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
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