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Home/ Questions/Q 1103899
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 17, 20262026-05-17T01:24:25+00:00 2026-05-17T01:24:25+00:00

I’m learning Ruby and have just gotten into some stuff about arrays and ranges.

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I’m learning Ruby and have just gotten into some stuff about arrays and ranges. I’ve run into something about slices that, while it makes sense at first glance, confuses me a bit when I look deeper into it.

IRB says that (2..-1).to_a is an empty array, meaning no values in the range, right?
But if I use that same range in [:a, :b, :c, :d, :e][2..-1], I get back [:c, :d, :e] rather than an empty array.

Now, I’m aware that -1 represents the last element of the array, so it kind of makes sense that what got picked, did. But if the range itself would be empty, how is it selecting anything?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-17T01:24:26+00:00Added an answer on May 17, 2026 at 1:24 am

    This is a fascinating question. The answer is that it’s not the individual elements of the range that are inspected when slicing the array, but the first and last elements. Specifically:

    >> (2..-1).to_a
    => []
    >> (2..-1).first
    => 2
    >> (2..-1).last
    => -1
    

    Thus the example works, since it slices the array from the [2] element to the [-1] element.

    If you want a consistent way to think about this, consider that (2..-1).to_a outputs the integers found between 2 and -1 (of which there are none), but that [2..-1] means from the 2 index to the -1 index.

    (Source: array.c and range.c in the Ruby source.)

    And, the complicated bonus part: to get the meaning you were thinking about, you could use

    >> [:a, :b, :c, :d, :e].values_at *(2..-1).to_a
    => []
    
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