I am trying to override Ruby's <=> (spaceship) operator to sort apples and oranges so that apples come first sorted by weight, and oranges second, sorted by sweetness. Like so:
module Fruity
attr_accessor :weight, :sweetness
def <=>(other)
# use Array#<=> to compare the attributes
[self.weight, self.sweetness] <=> [other.weight, other.sweetness]
end
include Comparable
end
class Apple
include Fruity
def initialize(w)
self.weight = w
end
end
class Orange
include Fruity
def initialize(s)
self.sweetness = s
end
end
fruits = [Apple.new(2),Orange.new(4),Apple.new(6),Orange.new(9),Apple.new(1),Orange.new(22)]
p fruits
#should work?
p fruits.sort
But this does not work, can someone tell what I am doing wrong here, or a better way to do this?
Your problem is you are only initializing one of the properties on either side, the other one will still be nil. nil isn't handled in the Array#<=> method, which ends up killing the sort.
There are a few ways to handle the problem first would be something like this
[self.weight.to_i, self.sweetness.to_i] <=> [other.weight.to_i, other.sweetness.to_i]
nil.to_i gives you 0, which will let this work.
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