The hidden trick is that "each" behaves as if it remembers how many times you called it, or more specifically, does something like:

First time call: build an array of keys in even positions and their values in odd positions and then...

All calls: shift and return the first two values in stored array.

The single-operand for loop you show calls "each" only once irrespective of what is returned and so it builds an iteration list of only one key/value pair. The reason a while loop DWIMs on the other hand is that it keeps calling "each", picking up pairs until the array it "kept to itself" is exhausted.

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^M Free your mind!


In reply to Re: code that fails to act as expected... by Moron
in thread code that fails to act as expected... by cgmd

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