Issue #8895 has been updated by alexeymuranov (Alexey Muranov). =begin How about this: (x, y, *rest, :a => a, :b => b, **options) = 1, 2, 3, 4, :a => :foo, :b => :bar, :c => false, :d => true x # => 1 y # => 2 rest # => [3, 4] a # => :foo b # => :bar options # => {:c=>false, :d=>true} =end ---------------------------------------- Feature #8895: Destructuring Assignment for Hash https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/8895#change-41905 Author: chendo (Jack Chen) Status: Open Priority: Normal Assignee: Category: Target version: =begin Given Ruby already supports destructuring assignment with Array (a, b = [1, 2]), I propose destructuring assignments for Hash. == Basic example params = {name: "John Smith", age: 42} {name: name, age: age} = params # name == "John Smith" # age == 42 This would replace a common pattern of assigning hash values to local variables to work with. == General syntax { <key-expr> => <variable_name>, ??? } = <object that responds to #[]> # Symbols { foo: bar } = { foo: "bar" } bar == "bar" # Potential shorthand { foo } = { foo: "bar" } foo == "bar" == Use cases: # MatchData { username: username, age: age } = "user:jsmith age:42".match(/user:(?<username>\w+) age:(?<age>\d+)/) username == "jsmith" age == "42" == Edge cases # Variable being assigned to more than once should use the last one { foo: var, bar: var } = {foo: 1, bar: 2} var == 2 Thoughts? =end -- http://bugs.ruby-lang.org/