HashCast is a library for casting hash attributes
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'hashcast'
Create caster class and declare hash attributes inside:
class ContactCaster
include HashCast::Caster
attributes do
hash :contact do
string :name
integer :age, optional: true
float :weight
date :birthday
datetime :last_logged_in
time :last_visited_at
hash :company do
string :name
end
array :emails, each: :string
array :social_accounts, each: :hash do
string :name
symbol :type
end
end
end
end
Instantiate the caster and give your hash for casting:
ContactCaster.cast({
contact: {
name: "John Smith",
age: "22",
weight: "65.5",
birthday: "2014-02-02",
last_logged_in: "2014-02-02 10:10:00",
last_visited_at: "2014-02-02 10:10:00",
company: {
name: "MyCo"
},
emails: ["test@example.com", "test2@example.com"],
social_accounts: [
{
name: "john_smith",
type: "twitter"
},
{
name: "John",
type: :facebook
}
]
}
}
})
The caster will cast your hash attributes to:
{
contact: {
name: "John Smith",
age: 22,
weight: 65.5,
birthday: #<Date: 2014-02-02 ((2456691j,0s,0n),+0s,2299161j)>,
last_logged_in: #<DateTime: 2014-02-02T10:10:00+00:00 ((2456691j,36600s,0n),+0s,2299161j)>,
last_visited_at: 2014-02-02 10:10:00 +0400,
company: {
name: "MyCo"
},
emails: ["test@example.com", "test2@example.com"],
social_accounts: [
{
name: "john_smith",
type: :twitter"
},
{
name: "John",
type: :facebook
}
]
}
}
if some of the attributes can't be casted the HashCast::Errors::CastingError is raised
Also you can provide options to every caster about expected keys type for input/output (:symbol / :string)
class SettingsCaster
include HashCast::Caster
attributes do
string :account
end
end
SettingsCaster.cast({account: "some"}, input_keys: :symbol, output_keys: :string)
# => {"account" => "some"}
# expect all input keys to be strings
HashCast.config.input_keys = :string
# expect all output keys to be symbols
HashCast.config.output_keys = :symbol
- Albert Gazizov, @deeper4k
- Roman Heinrich, @mindreframer