Given a set of strings, calculate the set of unambiguous abbreviations for those strings, and return a hash where the keys are all the possible abbreviations and the values are the full strings.
Thus, given words
is “car” and “cone”, the keys pointing to “car” would be “ca” and “car”, while those pointing to “cone” would be “co”, “con”, and “cone”.
require 'abbrev' Abbrev.abbrev(%w{ car cone }) #=> {"ca"=>"car", "con"=>"cone", "co"=>"cone", "car"=>"car", "cone"=>"cone"}
The optional pattern
parameter is a pattern or a string. Only input strings that match the pattern or start with the string are included in the output hash.
Abbrev.abbrev(%w{car box cone crab}, /b/) #=> {"box"=>"box", "bo"=>"box", "b"=>"box", "crab" => "crab"} Abbrev.abbrev(%w{car box cone}, 'ca') #=> {"car"=>"car", "ca"=>"car"}
Given a set of strings, calculate the set of unambiguous abbreviations for those strings, and return a hash where the keys are all the possible abbreviations and the values are the full strings.
Thus, given words
is “car” and “cone”, the keys pointing to “car” would be “ca” and “car”, while those pointing to “cone” would be “co”, “con”, and “cone”.
require 'abbrev' Abbrev.abbrev(%w{ car cone }) #=> {"ca"=>"car", "con"=>"cone", "co"=>"cone", "car"=>"car", "cone"=>"cone"}
The optional pattern
parameter is a pattern or a string. Only input strings that match the pattern or start with the string are included in the output hash.
Abbrev.abbrev(%w{car box cone crab}, /b/) #=> {"box"=>"box", "bo"=>"box", "b"=>"box", "crab" => "crab"} Abbrev.abbrev(%w{car box cone}, 'ca') #=> {"car"=>"car", "ca"=>"car"}
Returns the time used to execute the given block as a Benchmark::Tms
object. Takes label
option.
require 'benchmark' n = 1000000 time = Benchmark.measure do n.times { a = "1" } end puts time
Generates:
0.220000 0.000000 0.220000 ( 0.227313)
Returns the elapsed real time used to execute the given block.
Returns the time used to execute the given block as a Benchmark::Tms
object. Takes label
option.
require 'benchmark' n = 1000000 time = Benchmark.measure do n.times { a = "1" } end puts time
Generates:
0.220000 0.000000 0.220000 ( 0.227313)
Returns the elapsed real time used to execute the given block.
Is uri
the URI
for the current local server?
Get the thread of the primary server.
This returns nil if there is no primary server. See primary_server
.
Get the thread of the primary server.
This returns nil if there is no primary server. See primary_server
.
Options: (none)
Returns true if new
is newer than all old_list
. Non-existent files are older than any file.
FileUtils.uptodate?('hello.o', %w(hello.c hello.h)) or \ system 'make hello.o'
Options: (none)
Returns true if new
is newer than all old_list
. Non-existent files are older than any file.
FileUtils.uptodate?('hello.o', %w(hello.c hello.h)) or \ system 'make hello.o'
Options: mode preserve noop verbose
If src
is not same as dest
, copies it and changes the permission mode to mode
. If dest
is a directory, destination is dest
/src
. This method removes destination before copy.
FileUtils.install 'ruby', '/usr/local/bin/ruby', :mode => 0755, :verbose => true FileUtils.install 'lib.rb', '/usr/local/lib/ruby/site_ruby', :verbose => true
Options: mode preserve noop verbose
If src
is not same as dest
, copies it and changes the permission mode to mode
. If dest
is a directory, destination is dest
/src
. This method removes destination before copy.
FileUtils.install 'ruby', '/usr/local/bin/ruby', :mode => 0755, :verbose => true FileUtils.install 'lib.rb', '/usr/local/lib/ruby/site_ruby', :verbose => true
Options: noop verbose mtime nocreate
Updates modification time (mtime) and access time (atime) of file(s) in list
. Files are created if they don’t exist.
FileUtils.touch 'timestamp' FileUtils.touch Dir.glob('*.c'); system 'make'
Options: noop verbose mtime nocreate
Updates modification time (mtime) and access time (atime) of file(s) in list
. Files are created if they don’t exist.
FileUtils.touch 'timestamp' FileUtils.touch Dir.glob('*.c'); system 'make'
Returns a two-element array containing the normalized fraction (a Float
) and exponent (a Fixnum
) of x
.
fraction, exponent = Math.frexp(1234) #=> [0.6025390625, 11] fraction * 2**exponent #=> 1234.0
URI::regexp([match_schemes])
match_schemes
Array of schemes. If given, resulting regexp matches to URIs whose scheme is one of the match_schemes.
Returns a Regexp
object which matches to URI-like strings. The Regexp
object returned by this method includes arbitrary number of capture group (parentheses). Never rely on it’s number.
require 'uri' # extract first URI from html_string html_string.slice(URI.regexp) # remove ftp URIs html_string.sub(URI.regexp(['ftp']) # You should not rely on the number of parentheses html_string.scan(URI.regexp) do |*matches| p $& end
Open3.capture3
captures the standard output and the standard error of a command.
stdout_str, stderr_str, status = Open3.capture3([env,] cmd... [, opts])
The arguments env, cmd and opts are passed to Open3.popen3
except opts[:stdin_data]
and opts[:binmode]
. See Process.spawn
.
If opts[:stdin_data]
is specified, it is sent to the command’s standard input.
If opts[:binmode]
is true, internal pipes are set to binary mode.
Examples:
# dot is a command of graphviz. graph = <<'End' digraph g { a -> b } End drawn_graph, dot_log = Open3.capture3("dot -v", :stdin_data=>graph) o, e, s = Open3.capture3("echo abc; sort >&2", :stdin_data=>"foo\nbar\nbaz\n") p o #=> "abc\n" p e #=> "bar\nbaz\nfoo\n" p s #=> #<Process::Status: pid 32682 exit 0> # generate a thumbnail image using the convert command of ImageMagick. # However, if the image is really stored in a file, # system("convert", "-thumbnail", "80", "png:#{filename}", "png:-") is better # because of reduced memory consumption. # But if the image is stored in a DB or generated by the gnuplot Open3.capture2 example, # Open3.capture3 should be considered. # image = File.read("/usr/share/openclipart/png/animals/mammals/sheep-md-v0.1.png", :binmode=>true) thumbnail, err, s = Open3.capture3("convert -thumbnail 80 png:- png:-", :stdin_data=>image, :binmode=>true) if s.success? STDOUT.binmode; print thumbnail end
Open3.capture3
captures the standard output and the standard error of a command.
stdout_str, stderr_str, status = Open3.capture3([env,] cmd... [, opts])
The arguments env, cmd and opts are passed to Open3.popen3
except opts[:stdin_data]
and opts[:binmode]
. See Process.spawn
.
If opts[:stdin_data]
is specified, it is sent to the command’s standard input.
If opts[:binmode]
is true, internal pipes are set to binary mode.
Examples:
# dot is a command of graphviz. graph = <<'End' digraph g { a -> b } End drawn_graph, dot_log = Open3.capture3("dot -v", :stdin_data=>graph) o, e, s = Open3.capture3("echo abc; sort >&2", :stdin_data=>"foo\nbar\nbaz\n") p o #=> "abc\n" p e #=> "bar\nbaz\nfoo\n" p s #=> #<Process::Status: pid 32682 exit 0> # generate a thumbnail image using the convert command of ImageMagick. # However, if the image is really stored in a file, # system("convert", "-thumbnail", "80", "png:#{filename}", "png:-") is better # because of reduced memory consumption. # But if the image is stored in a DB or generated by the gnuplot Open3.capture2 example, # Open3.capture3 should be considered. # image = File.read("/usr/share/openclipart/png/animals/mammals/sheep-md-v0.1.png", :binmode=>true) thumbnail, err, s = Open3.capture3("convert -thumbnail 80 png:- png:-", :stdin_data=>image, :binmode=>true) if s.success? STDOUT.binmode; print thumbnail end
Open3.capture2
captures the standard output of a command.
stdout_str, status = Open3.capture2([env,] cmd... [, opts])
The arguments env, cmd and opts are passed to Open3.popen3
except opts[:stdin_data]
and opts[:binmode]
. See Process.spawn
.
If opts[:stdin_data]
is specified, it is sent to the command’s standard input.
If opts[:binmode]
is true, internal pipes are set to binary mode.
Example:
# factor is a command for integer factorization. o, s = Open3.capture2("factor", :stdin_data=>"42") p o #=> "42: 2 3 7\n" # generate x**2 graph in png using gnuplot. gnuplot_commands = <<"End" set terminal png plot x**2, "-" with lines 1 14 2 1 3 8 4 5 e End image, s = Open3.capture2("gnuplot", :stdin_data=>gnuplot_commands, :binmode=>true)