what is the best way to convert a json formatted key value pair to ruby hash with symbol as key?

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无人共我
无人共我 2020-12-23 13:08

I am wondering what is the best way to convert a json formatted key value pair to ruby hash with symbol as key: example:

{ \'user\': { \'name\': \'foo\', \'         


        
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  •  暖寄归人
    2020-12-23 13:36

    Leventix, thank you for your answer.

    The Marshal.load(Marshal.dump(h)) method probably has the most integrity of the various methods because it preserves the original key types recursively.

    This is important in case you have a nested hash with a mix of string and symbol keys and you want to preserve that mix upon decode (for instance, this could happen if your hash contains your own custom objects in addition to highly complex/nested third-party objects whose keys you cannot manipulate/convert for whatever reason, like a project time constraint).

    E.g.:

    h = {
          :youtube => {
                        :search   => 'daffy',                 # nested symbol key
                        'history' => ['goofy', 'mickey']      # nested string key
                      }
        }
    

    Method 1: JSON.parse - symbolizes all keys recursively => Does not preserve original mix

    JSON.parse( h.to_json, {:symbolize_names => true} )
      => { :youtube => { :search=> "daffy", :history => ["goofy", "mickey"] } } 
    

    Method 2: ActiveSupport::JSON.decode - symbolizes top-level keys only => Does not preserve original mix

    ActiveSupport::JSON.decode( ActiveSupport::JSON.encode(h) ).symbolize_keys
      => { :youtube => { "search" => "daffy", "history" => ["goofy", "mickey"] } }
    

    Method 3: Marshal.load - preserves original string/symbol mix in the nested keys. PERFECT!

    Marshal.load( Marshal.dump(h) )
      => { :youtube => { :search => "daffy", "history" => ["goofy", "mickey"] } }
    

    Unless there is a drawback that I'm unaware of, I'd think Method 3 is the way to go.

    Cheers

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