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Pattern matching

Pattern matching is a feature allowing deep matching of structured values: checking the structure and binding the matched parts to local variables.

Pattern matching in Ruby is implemented with the case/in expression:

case <expression>
in <pattern1>
  ...
in <pattern2>
  ...
in <pattern3>
  ...
else
  ...
end

(Note that in and when branches can NOT be mixed in one case expression.)

Or with the => operator and the in operator, which can be used in a standalone expression:

<expression> => <pattern>

<expression> in <pattern>

The case/in expression is exhaustive: if the value of the expression does not match any branch of the case expression (and the else branch is absent), NoMatchingPatternError is raised.

Therefore, the case expression might be used for conditional matching and unpacking:

config = {db: {user: 'admin', password: 'abc123'}}

case config
in db: {user:} # matches subhash and puts matched value in variable user
  puts "Connect with user '#{user}'"
in connection: {username: }
  puts "Connect with user '#{username}'"
else
  puts "Unrecognized structure of config"
end
# Prints: "Connect with user 'admin'"

whilst the => operator is most useful when the expected data structure is known beforehand, to just unpack parts of it:

config = {db: {user: 'admin', password: 'abc123'}}

config => {db: {user:}} # will raise if the config's structure is unexpected

puts "Connect with user '#{user}'"
# Prints: "Connect with user 'admin'"

<expression> in <pattern> is the same as case <expression>; in <pattern>; true; else false; end. You can use it when you only want to know if a pattern has been matched or not:

users = [{name: "Alice", age: 12}, {name: "Bob", age: 23}]
users.any? {|user| user in {name: /B/, age: 20..} } #=> true

See below for more examples and explanations of the syntax.

Patterns

Patterns can be:

Any pattern can be nested inside array/find/hash patterns where <subpattern> is specified.

Array patterns and find patterns match arrays, or objects that respond to deconstruct (see below about the latter). Hash patterns match hashes, or objects that respond to deconstruct_keys (see below about the latter). Note that only symbol keys are supported for hash patterns.

An important difference between array and hash pattern behavior is that arrays match only a whole array:

case [1, 2, 3]
in [Integer, Integer]
  "matched"
else
  "not matched"
end
#=> "not matched"

while the hash matches even if there are other keys besides the specified part:

case {a: 1, b: 2, c: 3}
in {a: Integer}
  "matched"
else
  "not matched"
end
#=> "matched"

{} is the only exclusion from this rule. It matches only if an empty hash is given:

case {a: 1, b: 2, c: 3}
in {}
  "matched"
else
  "not matched"
end
#=> "not matched"

case {}
in {}
  "matched"
else
  "not matched"
end
#=> "matched"

There is also a way to specify there should be no other keys in the matched hash except those explicitly specified by the pattern, with **nil:

case {a: 1, b: 2}
in {a: Integer, **nil} # this will not match the pattern having keys other than a:
  "matched a part"
in {a: Integer, b: Integer, **nil}
  "matched a whole"
else
  "not matched"
end
#=> "matched a whole"

Both array and hash patterns support “rest” specification:

case [1, 2, 3]
in [Integer, *]
  "matched"
else
  "not matched"
end
#=> "matched"

case {a: 1, b: 2, c: 3}
in {a: Integer, **}
  "matched"
else
  "not matched"
end
#=> "matched"

In case (but not in => and in) expressions, parentheses around both kinds of patterns could be omitted:

case [1, 2]
in Integer, Integer
  "matched"
else
  "not matched"
end
#=> "matched"

case {a: 1, b: 2, c: 3}
in a: Integer
  "matched"
else
  "not matched"
end
#=> "matched"

Find pattern is similar to array pattern but it can be used to check if the given object has any elements that match the pattern:

case ["a", 1, "b", "c", 2]
in [*, String, String, *]
  "matched"
else
  "not matched"
end

Variable binding

Besides deep structural checks, one of the very important features of the pattern matching is the binding of the matched parts to local variables. The basic form of binding is just specifying => variable_name after the matched (sub)pattern (one might find this similar to storing exceptions in local variables in a rescue ExceptionClass => var clause):

case [1, 2]
in Integer => a, Integer
  "matched: #{a}"
else
  "not matched"
end
#=> "matched: 1"

case {a: 1, b: 2, c: 3}
in a: Integer => m
  "matched: #{m}"
else
  "not matched"
end
#=> "matched: 1"

If no additional check is required, for only binding some part of the data to a variable, a simpler form could be used:

case [1, 2]
in a, Integer
  "matched: #{a}"
else
  "not matched"
end
#=> "matched: 1"

case {a: 1, b: 2, c: 3}
in a: m
  "matched: #{m}"
else
  "not matched"
end
#=> "matched: 1"

For hash patterns, even a simpler form exists: key-only specification (without any sub-pattern) binds the local variable with the key’s name, too:

case {a: 1, b: 2, c: 3}
in a:
  "matched: #{a}"
else
  "not matched"
end
#=> "matched: 1"

Binding works for nested patterns as well:

case {name: 'John', friends: [{name: 'Jane'}, {name: 'Rajesh'}]}
in name:, friends: [{name: first_friend}, *]
  "matched: #{first_friend}"
else
  "not matched"
end
#=> "matched: Jane"

The “rest” part of a pattern also can be bound to a variable:

case [1, 2, 3]
in a, *rest
  "matched: #{a}, #{rest}"
else
  "not matched"
end
#=> "matched: 1, [2, 3]"

case {a: 1, b: 2, c: 3}
in a:, **rest
  "matched: #{a}, #{rest}"
else
  "not matched"
end
#=> "matched: 1, {:b=>2, :c=>3}"

Binding to variables currently does NOT work for alternative patterns joined with |:

case {a: 1, b: 2}
in {a: } | Array
  "matched: #{a}"
else
  "not matched"
end
# SyntaxError (illegal variable in alternative pattern (a))

Variables that start with _ are the only exclusions from this rule:

case {a: 1, b: 2}
in {a: _, b: _foo} | Array
  "matched: #{_}, #{_foo}"
else
  "not matched"
end
# => "matched: 1, 2"

It is, though, not advised to reuse the bound value, as this pattern’s goal is to signify a discarded value.

Variable pinning

Due to the variable binding feature, existing local variable can not be straightforwardly used as a sub-pattern:

expectation = 18

case [1, 2]
in expectation, *rest
  "matched. expectation was: #{expectation}"
else
  "not matched. expectation was: #{expectation}"
end
# expected: "not matched. expectation was: 18"
# real: "matched. expectation was: 1" -- local variable just rewritten

For this case, the pin operator ^ can be used, to tell Ruby “just use this value as part of the pattern”:

expectation = 18
case [1, 2]
in ^expectation, *rest
  "matched. expectation was: #{expectation}"
else
  "not matched. expectation was: #{expectation}"
end
#=> "not matched. expectation was: 18"

One important usage of variable pinning is specifying that the same value should occur in the pattern several times:

jane = {school: 'high', schools: [{id: 1, level: 'middle'}, {id: 2, level: 'high'}]}
john = {school: 'high', schools: [{id: 1, level: 'middle'}]}

case jane
in school:, schools: [*, {id:, level: ^school}] # select the last school, level should match
  "matched. school: #{id}"
else
  "not matched"
end
#=> "matched. school: 2"

case john # the specified school level is "high", but last school does not match
in school:, schools: [*, {id:, level: ^school}]
  "matched. school: #{id}"
else
  "not matched"
end
#=> "not matched"

Matching non-primitive objects: deconstruct and deconstruct_keys

As already mentioned above, array, find, and hash patterns besides literal arrays and hashes will try to match any object implementing deconstruct (for array/find patterns) or deconstruct_keys (for hash patterns).

class Point
  def initialize(x, y)
    @x, @y = x, y
  end

  def deconstruct
    puts "deconstruct called"
    [@x, @y]
  end

  def deconstruct_keys(keys)
    puts "deconstruct_keys called with #{keys.inspect}"
    {x: @x, y: @y}
  end
end

case Point.new(1, -2)
in px, Integer  # sub-patterns and variable binding works
  "matched: #{px}"
else
  "not matched"
end
# prints "deconstruct called"
"matched: 1"

case Point.new(1, -2)
in x: 0.. => px
  "matched: #{px}"
else
  "not matched"
end
# prints: deconstruct_keys called with [:x]
#=> "matched: 1"

keys are passed to deconstruct_keys to provide a room for optimization in the matched class: if calculating a full hash representation is expensive, one may calculate only the necessary subhash. When the **rest pattern is used, nil is passed as a keys value:

case Point.new(1, -2)
in x: 0.. => px, **rest
  "matched: #{px}"
else
  "not matched"
end
# prints: deconstruct_keys called with nil
#=> "matched: 1"

Additionally, when matching custom classes, the expected class can be specified as part of the pattern and is checked with ===

class SuperPoint < Point
end

case Point.new(1, -2)
in SuperPoint(x: 0.. => px)
  "matched: #{px}"
else
  "not matched"
end
#=> "not matched"

case SuperPoint.new(1, -2)
in SuperPoint[x: 0.. => px] # [] or () parentheses are allowed
  "matched: #{px}"
else
  "not matched"
end
#=> "matched: 1"

Guard clauses

if can be used to attach an additional condition (guard clause) when the pattern matches. This condition may use bound variables:

case [1, 2]
in a, b if b == a*2
  "matched"
else
  "not matched"
end
#=> "matched"

case [1, 1]
in a, b if b == a*2
  "matched"
else
  "not matched"
end
#=> "not matched"

unless works, too:

case [1, 1]
in a, b unless b == a*2
  "matched"
else
  "not matched"
end
#=> "matched"

Current feature status

As of Ruby 3.0, one-line pattern matching and find patterns are considered experimental: its syntax can change in the future. Every time you use these features in code, a warning will be printed:

[0] => [*, 0, *]
# warning: Find pattern is experimental, and the behavior may change in future versions of Ruby!
# warning: One-line pattern matching is experimental, and the behavior may change in future versions of Ruby!

To suppress this warning, one may use the Warning.[]= method:

Warning[:experimental] = false
eval('[0] => [*, 0, *]')
# ...no warning printed...

Note that pattern-matching warnings are raised at compile time, so this will not suppress the warning:

Warning[:experimental] = false # At the time this line is evaluated, the parsing happened and warning emitted
[0] => [*, 0, *]

So, only subsequently loaded files or `eval`-ed code is affected by switching the flag.

Alternatively, the command line option -W:no-experimental can be used to turn off “experimental” feature warnings.

Appendix A. Pattern syntax

Approximate syntax is:

pattern: value_pattern
       | variable_pattern
       | alternative_pattern
       | as_pattern
       | array_pattern
       | find_pattern
       | hash_pattern

value_pattern: literal
             | Constant
             | ^variable

variable_pattern: variable

alternative_pattern: pattern | pattern | ...

as_pattern: pattern => variable

array_pattern: [pattern, ..., *variable]
             | Constant(pattern, ..., *variable)
             | Constant[pattern, ..., *variable]

find_pattern: [*variable, pattern, ..., *variable]
            | Constant(*variable, pattern, ..., *variable)
            | Constant[*variable, pattern, ..., *variable]

hash_pattern: {key: pattern, key:, ..., **variable}
            | Constant(key: pattern, key:, ..., **variable)
            | Constant[key: pattern, key:, ..., **variable]

Appendix B. Some undefined behavior examples

To leave room for optimization in the future, the specification contains some undefined behavior.

Use of a variable in an unmatched pattern:

case [0, 1]
in [a, 2]
  "not matched"
in b
  "matched"
in c
  "not matched"
end
a #=> undefined
c #=> undefined

Number of deconstruct, deconstruct_keys method calls:

$i = 0
ary = [0]
def ary.deconstruct
  $i += 1
  self
end
case ary
in [0, 1]
  "not matched"
in [0]
  "matched"
end
$i #=> undefined