Results for: "fnmatch"

Explicitly terminate option processing.

Returns true if option processing has terminated, false otherwise.

Iterator version of ‘get’.

The block is called repeatedly with two arguments: The first is the option name. The second is the argument which followed it (if any). Example: (‘–opt’, ‘value’)

The option name is always converted to the first (preferred) name given in the original options to GetoptLong.new.

Returns a new ipaddr built by masking IP address with the given prefixlen/netmask. (e.g. 8, 64, “255.255.255.0”, etc.)

Returns a new ipaddr built by converting the IPv6 address into a native IPv4 address. If the IP address is not an IPv4-mapped or IPv4-compatible IPv6 address, returns self.

Set current netmask to given mask.

Returns true iff the current severity level allows for the printing of FATAL messages.

Log a FATAL message.

See info for more information.

Returns the absolute value of fix.

-12345.abs   #=> 12345
12345.abs    #=> 12345
No documentation available

Yields all elements of the matrix, starting with those of the first row, or returns an Enumerator if no block given. Elements can be restricted by passing an argument:

Returns the adjugate of the matrix.

Matrix[ [7,6],[3,9] ].adjugate
  => 9 -6
     -3 7

Returns true if this is a normal matrix. Raises an error if matrix is not square.

Returns true if this is a permutation matrix Raises an error if matrix is not square.

Returns the conjugate of the matrix.

Matrix[[Complex(1,2), Complex(0,1), 0], [1, 2, 3]]
  => 1+2i   i  0
        1   2  3
Matrix[[Complex(1,2), Complex(0,1), 0], [1, 2, 3]].conjugate
  => 1-2i  -i  0
        1   2  3

Returns the imaginary part of the matrix.

Matrix[[Complex(1,2), Complex(0,1), 0], [1, 2, 3]]
  => 1+2i  i  0
        1  2  3
Matrix[[Complex(1,2), Complex(0,1), 0], [1, 2, 3]].imaginary
  =>   2i  i  0
        0  0  0
No documentation available

Iterate over the elements of this vector

Iterate over the elements of this vector and v in conjunction.

No documentation available

Returns the modulus (Pythagorean distance) of the vector.

Vector[5,8,2].r => 9.643650761

Like Vector#collect2, but returns a Vector instead of an Array.

Returns a new vector with the same direction but with norm 1.

v = Vector[5,8,2].normalize
# => Vector[0.5184758473652127, 0.8295613557843402, 0.20739033894608505]
v.norm => 1.0

Terminates option parsing. Optional parameter arg is a string pushed back to be the first non-option argument.

No documentation available
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