Returns true
if ios will be closed on exec.
f = open("/dev/null") f.close_on_exec? #=> false f.close_on_exec = true f.close_on_exec? #=> true f.close_on_exec = false f.close_on_exec? #=> false
Sets a close-on-exec flag.
f = open("/dev/null") f.close_on_exec = true system("cat", "/proc/self/fd/#{f.fileno}") # cat: /proc/self/fd/3: No such file or directory f.closed? #=> false
Ruby sets close-on-exec flags of all file descriptors by default since Ruby 2.0.0. So you don’t need to set by yourself. Also, unsetting a close-on-exec flag can cause file descriptor leak if another thread use fork() and exec() (via system() method for example). If you really needs file descriptor inheritance to child process, use spawn()‘s argument such as fd=>fd.
Invoked as a callback whenever a singleton method is added to the receiver.
module Chatty def Chatty.singleton_method_added(id) puts "Adding #{id.id2name}" end def self.one() end def two() end def Chatty.three() end end
produces:
Adding singleton_method_added Adding one Adding three
Invoked as a callback whenever a singleton method is undefined in the receiver.
module Chatty def Chatty.singleton_method_undefined(id) puts "Undefining #{id.id2name}" end def Chatty.one() end class << self undef_method(:one) end end
produces:
Undefining one
Re-composes a prime factorization and returns the product.
See Prime#int_from_prime_division
for more details.
Task
description for the clobber rdoc task or its renamed equivalent
Task
description for the rdoc task or its renamed equivalent
Returns the last win32 Error
of the current executing Thread
or nil if none
Sets the last win32 Error
of the current executing Thread
to error
Returns the class for the given object
.
class A def foo ObjectSpace::trace_object_allocations do obj = Object.new p "#{ObjectSpace::allocation_class_path(obj)}" end end end A.new.foo #=> "Class"
See ::trace_object_allocations
for more information and examples.
Returns the method identifier for the given object
.
class A include ObjectSpace def foo trace_object_allocations do obj = Object.new p "#{allocation_class_path(obj)}##{allocation_method_id(obj)}" end end end A.new.foo #=> "Class#new"
See ::trace_object_allocations
for more information and examples.
Counts objects size (in bytes) for each type.
Note that this information is incomplete. You need to deal with this information as only a HINT. Especially, total size of T_DATA may not right size.
It returns a hash as:
{:TOTAL=>1461154, :T_CLASS=>158280, :T_MODULE=>20672, :T_STRING=>527249, ...}
If the optional argument, result_hash, is given, it is overwritten and returned. This is intended to avoid probe effect.
The contents of the returned hash is implementation defined. It may be changed in future.
This method is only expected to work with C Ruby.
Counts objects for each T_DATA
type.
This method is only for MRI developers interested in performance and memory usage of Ruby programs.
It returns a hash as:
{RubyVM::InstructionSequence=>504, :parser=>5, :barrier=>6, :mutex=>6, Proc=>60, RubyVM::Env=>57, Mutex=>1, Encoding=>99, ThreadGroup=>1, Binding=>1, Thread=>1, RubyVM=>1, :iseq=>1, Random=>1, ARGF.class=>1, Data=>1, :autoload=>3, Time=>2} # T_DATA objects existing at startup on r32276.
If the optional argument, result_hash, is given, it is overwritten and returned. This is intended to avoid probe effect.
The contents of the returned hash is implementation specific and may change in the future.
In this version, keys are Class
object or Symbol
object.
If object is kind of normal (accessible) object, the key is Class
object. If object is not a kind of normal (internal) object, the key is symbol name, registered by rb_data_type_struct.
This method is only expected to work with C Ruby.
Specifies a Proc
object proc
to determine if a character in the user’s input is escaped. It should take the user’s input and the index of the character in question as input, and return a boolean (true if the specified character is escaped).
Readline
will only call this proc with characters specified in completer_quote_characters
, to discover if they indicate the end of a quoted argument, or characters specified in completer_word_break_characters
, to discover if they indicate a break between arguments.
If completer_quote_characters
is not set, or if the user input doesn’t contain one of the completer_quote_characters
or a ++ character, Readline
will not attempt to use this proc at all.
Raises ArgumentError
if proc
does not respond to the call method.
Returns the quoting detection Proc
object.
Sets a list of characters which can be used to quote a substring of the line. Completion occurs on the entire substring, and within the substring Readline.completer_word_break_characters
are treated as any other character, unless they also appear within this list.
Raises NotImplementedError
if the using readline library does not support.
Gets a list of characters which can be used to quote a substring of the line.
Raises NotImplementedError
if the using readline library does not support.
Returns information about the most recent garbage collection.
Generate URL-encoded form data from given enum
.
This generates application/x-www-form-urlencoded data defined in HTML5 from given an Enumerable
object.
This internally uses URI.encode_www_form_component(str)
.
This method doesn’t convert the encoding of given items, so convert them before call this method if you want to send data as other than original encoding or mixed encoding data. (Strings which are encoded in an HTML5 ASCII incompatible encoding are converted to UTF-8.)
This method doesn’t handle files. When you send a file, use multipart/form-data.
This refers url.spec.whatwg.org/#concept-urlencoded-serializer
URI.encode_www_form([["q", "ruby"], ["lang", "en"]]) #=> "q=ruby&lang=en" URI.encode_www_form("q" => "ruby", "lang" => "en") #=> "q=ruby&lang=en" URI.encode_www_form("q" => ["ruby", "perl"], "lang" => "en") #=> "q=ruby&q=perl&lang=en" URI.encode_www_form([["q", "ruby"], ["q", "perl"], ["lang", "en"]]) #=> "q=ruby&q=perl&lang=en"
Decode URL-encoded form data from given str
.
This decodes application/x-www-form-urlencoded data and returns array of key-value array.
This refers url.spec.whatwg.org/#concept-urlencoded-parser , so this supports only &-separator, don’t support ;-separator.
ary = URI.decode_www_form("a=1&a=2&b=3") p ary #=> [['a', '1'], ['a', '2'], ['b', '3']] p ary.assoc('a').last #=> '1' p ary.assoc('b').last #=> '3' p ary.rassoc('a').last #=> '2' p Hash[ary] # => {"a"=>"2", "b"=>"3"}
Returns a list of paths matching glob
from the latest gems that can be used by a gem to pick up features from other gems. For example:
Gem.find_latest_files('rdoc/discover').each do |path| load path end
if check_load_path
is true (the default), then find_latest_files
also searches $LOAD_PATH for files as well as gems.
Unlike find_files
, find_latest_files
will return only files from the latest version of a gem.
The file name and line number of the caller of the caller of this method.
Returns the latest release-version specification for the gem name
.