struct Tuple(*T)

Overview

A tuple is a fixed-size, immutable, stack-allocated sequence of values of possibly different types.

You can think of a Tuple as an immutable Array whose types for each position are known at compile time.

A tuple can be created with the usual new method or with a tuple literal:

tuple = {1, "hello", 'x'} # Tuple(Int32, String, Char)
tuple[0]                  # => 1
tuple[1]                  # => "hello"
tuple[2]                  # => 'x'

The compiler knows what types are in each position, so when indexing a tuple with an integer literal the compiler will return the value in that index and with the expected type, like in the above snippet. Indexing with an integer literal outside the bounds of the tuple will give a compile-time error.

Indexing with an integer value that is only known at runtime will return a value whose type is the union of all the types in the tuple, and might raise IndexError.

Tuples are the preferred way to return fixed-size multiple return values because no memory is needed to be allocated for them:

def one_and_hello
  {1, "hello"}
end

one, hello = one_and_hello
one   # => 1
hello # => "hello"

Good examples of the above are Number#divmod and Enumerable#minmax.

Tuples can be splat with the * operator and passed to methods:

def multiply(string, value)
  string * value
end

tuple = {"hey", 2}
value = multiply(*tuple) # same as multiply tuple[0], tuple[1]
value                    # => "heyhey"

Finally, when using a splat argument in a method definition its type will be a tuple of the call arguments:

def splat_test(*args)
  args
end

tuple = splat_test 1, "hello", 'x'
tuple.class # => Tuple(Int32, String, Char)
tuple       # => {1, "hello", 'x'}

Included Modules

Defined in:

ifrit/core.cr

Instance Method Summary

Instance methods inherited from class Object

blank? : Bool blank?, present? present?

Instance Method Detail

def blank? #

Returns if object is blank one - empty (or whitespaced) string, empty array, empty hash, nil or false.


[View source]