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Add Iterate With An Offset Index as a ruby til

This commit is contained in:
jbranchaud
2019-08-09 21:12:53 -05:00
parent 6c15261dac
commit 2ccd05b5c8
2 changed files with 37 additions and 1 deletions

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@@ -10,7 +10,7 @@ smart people at [Hashrocket](http://hashrocket.com/).
For a steady stream of TILs from a variety of rocketeers, checkout
[til.hashrocket.com](https://til.hashrocket.com/).
_831 TILs and counting..._
_832 TILs and counting..._
---
@@ -648,6 +648,7 @@ _831 TILs and counting..._
- [Get Info About Your RubyGems Environment](ruby/get-info-about-your-ruby-gems-environment.md)
- [Identify Outdated Gems](ruby/identify-outdated-gems.md)
- [If You Detect None](ruby/if-you-detect-none.md)
- [Iterate With An Offset Index](ruby/iterate-with-an-offset-index.md)
- [Ins And Outs Of Pry](ruby/ins-and-outs-of-pry.md)
- [Invoking Rake Tasks Multiple Times](ruby/invoking-rake-tasks-multiple-times.md)
- [Last Raised Exception In The Call Stack](ruby/last-raised-exception-in-the-call-stack.md)

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@@ -0,0 +1,35 @@
# Iterate With An Offset Index
You can iterate over a collection of items with the
[`#each`](https://devdocs.io/ruby~2.5/enumerator#method-i-each) method. If you
want to know the index of each item as you go, you can use the
[`#each_with_index`](https://devdocs.io/ruby~2.5/enumerable#method-i-each_with_index)
variant.
```ruby
> ["one", "two", "three"].each_with_index do |item, index|
puts "#{item} - #{index}"
end
one - 0
two - 1
three - 2
=> ["one", "two", "three"]
```
The initial index will always be `0` when using `#each_with_index`.
What about if you want the index value to be offset by some number?
You can use the
[`#with_index`](https://devdocs.io/ruby~2.5/enumerator#method-i-with_index)
method on an _enumerator_. It optionally takes an `offset` argument.
```ruby
> ["one", "two", "three"].each.with_index(1) do |item, index|
puts "#{item} - #{index}"
end
one - 1
two - 2
three - 3
=> ["one", "two", "three"]
```