| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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The problem existed where if your ArrayInquirer values were
strings but you checked them using any? with a symbol, it would
not find the value. Now it will correctly check whether both
the String form or the Symbol form are included in the Array.
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This reverts commit 9420de59f5b7f5ceac77e28e6c326ec145f71f80.
Reason: Turns out we want to keep this method.
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We are promoting too much a feature that will not be widler used.
So for now lets keep just the ArrayInquirer constructor.
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Wrapping an array in an `ArrayInquirer` gives a friendlier way to check its
string-like contents. For example, `request.variant` returns an `ArrayInquirer`
object. To check a request's variants, you can call:
request.variant.phone?
request.variant.any?(:phone, :tablet)
...instead of:
request.variant.include?(:phone)
request.variant.any? { |v| v.in?([:phone, :tablet]) }
`Array#inquiry` is a shortcut for wrapping the receiving array in an
`ArrayInquirer`:
pets = [:cat, :dog]
pets.cat? # => true
pets.ferret? # => false
pets.any?(:cat, :ferret} # => true
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