A LocalSpecification
comes from a .gem file on the local filesystem.
The LockSpecification
comes from a lockfile (Gem::RequestSet::Lockfile
).
A LockSpecification’s dependency information is pre-filled from the lockfile.
The Resolver::SpecSpecification contains common functionality for Resolver specifications that are backed by a Gem::Specification
.
A Resolver::Specification contains a subset of the information contained in a Gem::Specification
. Only the information necessary for dependency resolution in the resolver is included.
A VendorSpecification
represents a gem that has been unpacked into a project and is being loaded through a gem dependencies file through the path:
option.
The StaticSet
is a static set of gem specifications used for testing only. It is available by requiring Gem::TestCase
.
Mounts a proc at a path that accepts a request and response.
Instead of mounting this servlet with WEBrick::HTTPServer#mount
use WEBrick::HTTPServer#mount_proc
:
server.mount_proc '/' do |req, res| res.body = 'it worked!' res.status = 200 end
Root of the HTTP status class hierarchy
Stores multipart form data. FormData
objects are created when WEBrick::HTTPUtils.parse_form_data
is called.
An object representation of a stack frame, initialized by Kernel#caller_locations
.
For example:
# caller_locations.rb def a(skip) caller_locations(skip) end def b(skip) a(skip) end def c(skip) b(skip) end c(0..2).map do |call| puts call.to_s end
Running ruby caller_locations.rb
will produce:
caller_locations.rb:2:in `a' caller_locations.rb:5:in `b' caller_locations.rb:8:in `c'
Here’s another example with a slightly different result:
# foo.rb class Foo attr_accessor :locations def initialize(skip) @locations = caller_locations(skip) end end Foo.new(0..2).locations.map do |call| puts call.to_s end
Now run ruby foo.rb
and you should see:
init.rb:4:in `initialize' init.rb:8:in `new' init.rb:8:in `<main>'
Common validators of number and nz_number types
The TextConstruct
module is used to define a Text construct Atom
element, which is used to store small quantities of human-readable text.
The TextConstruct
has a type attribute, e.g. text, html, xhtml
Reference: validator.w3.org/feed/docs/rfc4287.html#text.constructs
Element
used to describe an Atom
date and time in the ISO 8601 format
Examples:
2013-03-04T15:30:02Z
2013-03-04T10:30:02-05:00