On Mon, Jun 15, 2015 at 9:14 AM Kurt Andrews <kurt.w.andr...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Thank you gentlemen, you've been a great help. This does exactly what I > need: > > <code> > response.data.each { owner -> > owner.children.each { dealer -> > dealer.children.each { location -> > location.children.each { grower -> > println([grower.type, grower.profile_id, grower.name, > grower.created, grower.modified, "", ""].join("|")) > grower.children.each { farm -> > println([farm.type, farm.farm_id, farm.name, farm.created, > farm.modified, grower.profile_id, ""].join("|")) > farm.children.each { field -> > println([field.type, field.field_id, field.name, > field.created, field.modified, grower.profile_id, > farm.farm_id].join("|"))}}}}}} > </code> > > On Mon, Jun 15, 2015 at 8:32 AM David Clark <plotinussm...@gmail.com> > wrote: > >> Yes. My mistake, thank you for the correction. >> >> >> On 06/15/2015 04:43 AM, Dinko Srkoč wrote: >> >> One should be careful about those nested its where explicit Closure >> parameters are used: >> >> response.data.each { it.children.each { it.children.each { >> // scope X here >> it.children.each { grower -> >> println ... >> // it.children.each { farm -> ... 'it' comes from scope X >> grower.children.each { farm -> // ok >> println ... >> // it.children.each { field -> ... 'it' is still from scope X >> farm.children.each { field -> // ok >> println ... >> } >> } >> } >> }}} >> >> Cheers, >> Dinko >> >> >> On 15 June 2015 at 07:19, David Clark <plotinussm...@gmail.com> wrote: >> >>> Try something like this: >>> >>> response.data.each { >>> it.children.each { >>> it.children.each { >>> it.children.each { grower -> println([grower.type, >>> grower.profile_id, grower.name <http://it.name>, grower.created, >>> grower.modified, "", ""].join("|")) >>> it.children.each { farm -> println([farm.type, >>> farm.farm_id, farm.name <http://it.name>, farm.created, farm.modified, >>> grower.profile_id, ""].join("|")) >>> it.children.each { field -> println([field.type, >>> field.field_id, field.name <http://it.name>, field.created, field.modified, >>> grower.profile_id, farm.farm_id].join("|")) } } } } } } >>> >>> Moving the brackets is optional, it just hurts my eyes to see all of >>> those dangling angle brackets each on a line by itself. >>> >>> >>> On 06/14/2015 11:45 PM, Kurt Andrews wrote: >>> >>> I'm trying to figure out how to pass an extra parameter to the closure >>> that's being passed to each in the following code >>> >>> response.data.each { >>> it.children.each { >>> it.children.each { >>> it.children.each { // growers println([it.type, it.profile_id, >>> it.name, it.created, it.modified, "", ""].join("|")) >>> it.children.each { // farms println([it.type, it.farm_id, >>> it.name, it.created, it.modified, grower.profile_id, ""].join("|")) >>> it.children.each { // fields println([it.type, >>> it.field_id, it.name, it.created, it.modified, grower.profile_id, >>> farm.farm_id].join("|")) >>> } >>> } >>> } >>> } >>> } >>> } >>> >>> I'm trying to pass the grower profile_id down to the farms and the >>> fields and pass the farms farm_id down to fields. Is there a simple way >>> to do this? >>> >>> Thanks, >>> >>> Kurt >>> >>> >>> >> >>