Results for: "remove_const"

Switch that takes an argument.

No documentation available

An absolutely silent progress reporter.

A basic dotted progress reporter.

A progress reporter that prints out messages about the current progress.

Root of the HTTP redirect statuses

Root of the HTTP server error statuses

No documentation available
No documentation available
No documentation available

Description

An FFI closure wrapper, for handling callbacks.

Example

closure = Class.new(Fiddle::Closure) {
  def call
    10
  end
}.new(Fiddle::TYPE_INT, [])
   #=> #<#<Class:0x0000000150d308>:0x0000000150d240>
func = Fiddle::Function.new(closure, [], Fiddle::TYPE_INT)
   #=> #<Fiddle::Function:0x00000001516e58>
func.call
   #=> 10

This exception is raised if a parser error occurs.

This exception is raised if a generator or unparser error occurs.

This exception is raised if a generator or unparser error occurs.

This class works in conjunction with Psych::Parser to build an in-memory parse tree that represents a YAML document.

Example

parser = Psych::Parser.new Psych::TreeBuilder.new
parser.parse('--- foo')
tree = parser.handler.root

See Psych::Handler for documentation on the event methods used in this class.

Subclass of Zlib::Error

When zlib returns a Z_MEM_ERROR, usually if there was not enough memory.

Zlib::GzipReader is the class for reading a gzipped file. GzipReader should be used as an IO, or -IO-like, object.

Zlib::GzipReader.open('hoge.gz') {|gz|
  print gz.read
}

File.open('hoge.gz') do |f|
  gz = Zlib::GzipReader.new(f)
  print gz.read
  gz.close
end

Method Catalogue

The following methods in Zlib::GzipReader are just like their counterparts in IO, but they raise Zlib::Error or Zlib::GzipFile::Error exception if an error was found in the gzip file.

Be careful of the footer of the gzip file. A gzip file has the checksum of pre-compressed data in its footer. GzipReader checks all uncompressed data against that checksum at the following cases, and if it fails, raises Zlib::GzipFile::NoFooter, Zlib::GzipFile::CRCError, or Zlib::GzipFile::LengthError exception.

The rest of the methods are adequately described in their own documentation.

No documentation available
No documentation available
No documentation available

The error thrown when the parser encounters illegal CSV formatting.

Error raised by the DRb module when an attempt is made to refer to the context’s current drb server but the context does not have one. See current_server.

Error raised by a dRuby protocol when it doesn’t support the scheme specified in a URI. See DRb::DRbProtocol.

Class representing a drb server instance.

A DRbServer must be running in the local process before any incoming dRuby calls can be accepted, or any local objects can be passed as dRuby references to remote processes, even if those local objects are never actually called remotely. You do not need to start a DRbServer in the local process if you are only making outgoing dRuby calls passing marshalled parameters.

Unless multiple servers are being used, the local DRbServer is normally started by calling DRb.start_service.

Raised when the provided IP address is an invalid address.

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