Issue #14415 has been updated by jeremyevans0 (Jeremy Evans). Status changed from Open to Closed jeremyevans0 (Jeremy Evans) wrote: > I think the only case that is questionable still is: > > ```ruby > [**({};)] > # => [] > [**(;{})] # and h = {}; [**h] > # => [{}] > ``` > > The keyword argument separation changes just made to the master branch did not affect this code, since it isn't a method call. This behavior has been present since Ruby 2.2. I think it would be a good idea to make both `[**({};)]` and `[**(;{})]` return `[]`. Recent changes to the master branch have fixed this issue. Keyword splats of empty hashes in arrays no longer add an empty hash to the array: ```ruby [**(;{})] # => [] ``` ---------------------------------------- Bug #14415: Empty keyword hashes get assigned to ordinal args. https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/14415#change-81364 * Author: josh.cheek (Josh Cheek) * Status: Closed * Priority: Normal * Assignee: * Target version: * ruby -v: ruby 2.5.0p0 (2017-12-25 revision 61468) [x86_64-darwin17] * Backport: 2.3: UNKNOWN, 2.4: UNKNOWN, 2.5: UNKNOWN ---------------------------------------- Spreading empty arrays works, even when they go through a variable, or are disguised: ~~~ruby args = [] # => [] ->{}.call *[] # => nil ->{}.call *args # => nil ->{}.call *([]) # => nil ->{}.call *([];) # => nil ->{}.call *(;[]) # => nil ->{}.call *[*[]] # => nil ->{}.call *([];[]) # => nil ->{}.call *[*args] # => nil ~~~ Spreading empty keywords does not, when going through a variable, or sufficiently disguised: ~~~ruby kws = {} # => {} ->{}.call **{} # => nil ->{}.call **kws rescue $! # => #<ArgumentError: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 0)> ->{}.call **({}) # => nil ->{}.call **({};) # => nil ->{}.call **(;{}) rescue $! # => #<ArgumentError: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 0)> ->{}.call **{**{}} # => nil ->{}.call **({};{}) rescue $! # => #<ArgumentError: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 0)> ->{}.call **{**kws} rescue $! # => #<ArgumentError: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 0)> ~~~ It seems that `**{}` gets optimized out of the code, as expected. Likely due to https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/10719 But `**empty_kws` still gets incorrectly passed as a hash, despite an attempt to fix it in https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/13717 ~~~ruby ->a{a}.call **{} rescue $! # => #<ArgumentError: wrong number of arguments (given 0, expected 1)> ->a{a}.call **kws # => {} ->a{a}.call **(;{}) # => {} (;{}) # => {} ~~~ Further confusion, it's missing `a`, not `b`: ~~~ruby ->a,b:{}.call **{b:1} rescue $! # => #<ArgumentError: missing keyword: b> ~~~ Treating keywords as a special form of hash makes them very difficult to reason about. Arrays manage to pull off destructuring and spreading with no issue, as we saw above. I just want hashes to work like arrays with named matching instead of ordinal matching. For each example below, try looking at the LHS and predicting what the result will be. ~~~ruby ->a,b:,**c{[a,b,c]}.call 1, b:2 # => [1, 2, {}] ->a,b:,**c{[a,b,c]}.call 1, b:2, 3=>4 rescue $! # => #<ArgumentError: wrong number of arguments (given 2, expected 1; required keyword: b)> ->a,b:,**c{[a,b,c]}.call 1=>2, b:3 rescue $! # => #<ArgumentError: missing keyword: b> ->a,b:,**c{[a,b,c]}.call 1=>2, **{b:3} rescue $! # => #<ArgumentError: missing keyword: b> ->a,b:,**c{[a,b,c]}.call({1=>2}, b: 3) # => [{1=>2}, 3, {}] ->a,b:,**c{[a,b,c]}.call({1=>2}, {b: 3}) # => [{1=>2}, 3, {}] ->*a {a }.call 1, b:2, c:3, 4=>5 # => [1, {:b=>2, :c=>3, 4=>5}] ->*a,b:,**c{[a,b,c]}.call 1, b:2, c:3, 4=>5 # => [[1, {4=>5}], 2, {:c=>3}] ~~~ Keywords are getting in the way of beautiful hash spreading! ~~~ruby [*[1,2], *[:c, :d]] # => [1, 2, :c, :d] {**{1=>2}, **{c: :d}} rescue $! # => #<TypeError: wrong argument type Integer (expected Symbol)> [1,2,**{a:3}] # => [1, 2, {:a=>3}] [1,2,**{}] # => [1, 2] [1,2,**kws] # => [1, 2, {}] ~~~ Note that the latest JS's behaviour is congruent with my expected outputs: ~~~sh $ node -v # >> v8.9.4 $ node -p ' (({a, c, ...rest}) => [a, c, rest]) ({a: 1, b: 2, c: 3, d: 4}) ' # >> [ 1, 3, { b: 2, d: 4 } ] $ node -p ' const a=1, b=2, e={f: 5, g: 6} ;({...{a, b}, ...{c: 3, d: 4}, ...e}) ' # >> { a: 1, b: 2, c: 3, d: 4, f: 5, g: 6 } ~~~ -- https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/ Unsubscribe: <mailto:ruby-core-request / ruby-lang.org?subject=unsubscribe> <http://lists.ruby-lang.org/cgi-bin/mailman/options/ruby-core>