In the case of your example we’d do .map(
in Ruby (if unwrap was a method we’d actually want to call)
Notably, these are not the cases _1
and _2
etc are for. They are there for the cases that are not structurally “call this method on the single argument to the block” e.g. .map{ _1 + _2 }
or .map { x.foo(_1) }
(_1
is reasonable, because iterating over an enumerable sequence makes it obvious what it is; _1
and _2
combined is often reasonable, because e.g. if we iterate over a key, value enumerable, such as what you get from enumerating a Hash
, it’s obvious what you get; if you find yourself using _3
or above, you’re turning to the dark side and should rethink your entire life)