Supporting Ruby 1.9's hash syntax in Ruby 1.8

对着背影说爱祢 提交于 2019-11-27 22:33:08

I think you're out of luck, if you want to support 1.8 then you have to use =>. As usual, I will mention that you must use => in certain cases in 1.9:

  1. If the key is not a symbol. Remember that any object (symbols, strings, classes, floats, ...) can be a key in a Ruby Hash.
  2. If you need a symbol that you'd quote: :'this.that'.
  3. If you use MongoDB for pretty much anything you'll be using things like :$set => hash but $set: hash is a syntax error.

Back to our regularly scheduled programming.

Why do I say that you're out of luck? The Hash literal syntaxes (both of them) are hard-wired in the parser and I don't think you're going to have much luck patching the parser from your gem. Ruby 1.8.7's parse.y has this to say:

assoc    : arg_value tASSOC arg_value
             {
                 $$ = list_append(NEW_LIST($1), $3);
             }
         ;

and tASSOC is => so hash literals are hard-wired to use =>. 1.9.3's says this:

assoc    : arg_value tASSOC arg_value
             {
             /*%%%*/
                 $$ = list_append(NEW_LIST($1), $3);
             /*%
                 $$ = dispatch2(assoc_new, $1, $3);
             %*/
             }
         | tLABEL arg_value
             {
             /*%%%*/
                 $$ = list_append(NEW_LIST(NEW_LIT(ID2SYM($1))), $2);
             /*%
                 $$ = dispatch2(assoc_new, $1, $2);
             %*/
             }
         ;

We have the fat-arrow syntax again (arg_value tASSOC arg_value) and the JavaScript style (tLABEL arg_value); AFAIK, tLABEL is also the source of the restrictions on what sorts of symbols (no :$set, no :'this.that', ...) can be used with the JavaScript-style syntax. The current trunk parse.y matches 1.9.3 for Hash literals.

So the Hash literal syntax is hard-wired into the parser and you're stuck with fat arrows if you want to support 1.8.

Ruby 1.8.7 does not support the new hash syntax.

If you desperately need hash syntax on the non-YARV c-based implementation of Ruby, there is a totally unsupported 1.8 head branch, so you can do

rvm install ruby-head --branch ruby_1_8 ; rvm ruby-head
ruby -v
ruby 1.8.8dev (2011-05-25) [i386-darwin10.7.0]

but upgrading to 1.9 is the way to go.

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