Quick question.
How can I test a word to see if it is singular or plural?
I'd really like:
test_singularity('word') # => true
test_singularity('words') # => false
I bet rails is capable!
Thanks.
Quick question.
How can I test a word to see if it is singular or plural?
I'd really like:
test_singularity('word') # => true
test_singularity('words') # => false
I bet rails is capable!
Thanks.
Neither ruby nor rails come with a specific method for testing for "plurality" on words.
As nowk said, the most you can do is implement them yourself, comparing with word.pluralize
and word.singularize
. This will give you a quick-and-cheap-and-generally-good way of testing. It will fail some times, though.
If you need more precision, you will need to use the Ruby Linguistics gem, which can deal with dress and dresses properly (but it's heavier).
Most of the times i never test for singularity or plural, i just convert it to the singular or plural form i require.
In Rails 2.3.x this was possible, writing something like this
plural_form = org_word.singularize.pluralize
singular_form = org_word.pluralize.singularize
Working further on this, a working function is easy to supply:
require 'active_support'
def is_singular?(str)
str.pluralize.singularize == str
end
%w(word words rail rails dress dresses).each do |v|
puts "#{v} : #{is_singular?(v)}"
end
which gives the following output:
word : true
words : false
rail : true
rails : false
dress : true
dresses : false
In Rails 4, with the given words, it is now much easier. You can just do
plural_form = org_word.pluralize
singular_form = org_word.singularize
and thus the function becomes much easier as well:
require 'active_support'
def is_singular?(str)
str.singularize == str
end
Well in rails, you can do a
string#singularize|#pluralize
comparison to return a true or false value.But I would think due to the nature of language itself, this might need some backup to do be completely accurate.
You could do something like this
But to see how accurate, I ran a quick set of words.
I was a little surprised actually, since 'dress' does get pluralized properly, but when it goes through the #singularize it runs into a bit of a snag.