Save session state to the session’s PStore
file.
Update and close the session’s PStore
file.
Close and delete the session’s PStore
file.
Raised in case of a stack overflow.
def me_myself_and_i me_myself_and_i end me_myself_and_i
raises the exception:
SystemStackError: stack level too deep
Raised when an invalid operation is attempted on a Fiber
, in particular when attempting to call/resume a dead fiber, attempting to yield from the root fiber, or calling a fiber across threads.
fiber = Fiber.new{} fiber.resume #=> nil fiber.resume #=> FiberError: dead fiber called
A class which allows both internal and external iteration.
An Enumerator
can be created by the following methods.
Kernel#to_enum
Kernel#enum_for
Most methods have two forms: a block form where the contents are evaluated for each item in the enumeration, and a non-block form which returns a new Enumerator
wrapping the iteration.
enumerator = %w(one two three).each puts enumerator.class # => Enumerator enumerator.each_with_object("foo") do |item, obj| puts "#{obj}: #{item}" end # foo: one # foo: two # foo: three enum_with_obj = enumerator.each_with_object("foo") puts enum_with_obj.class # => Enumerator enum_with_obj.each do |item, obj| puts "#{obj}: #{item}" end # foo: one # foo: two # foo: three
This allows you to chain Enumerators together. For example, you can map a list’s elements to strings containing the index and the element as a string via:
puts %w[foo bar baz].map.with_index { |w, i| "#{i}:#{w}" } # => ["0:foo", "1:bar", "2:baz"]
An Enumerator
can also be used as an external iterator. For example, Enumerator#next
returns the next value of the iterator or raises StopIteration
if the Enumerator
is at the end.
e = [1,2,3].each # returns an enumerator object. puts e.next # => 1 puts e.next # => 2 puts e.next # => 3 puts e.next # raises StopIteration
You can use this to implement an internal iterator as follows:
def ext_each(e) while true begin vs = e.next_values rescue StopIteration return $!.result end y = yield(*vs) e.feed y end end o = Object.new def o.each puts yield puts yield(1) puts yield(1, 2) 3 end # use o.each as an internal iterator directly. puts o.each {|*x| puts x; [:b, *x] } # => [], [:b], [1], [:b, 1], [1, 2], [:b, 1, 2], 3 # convert o.each to an external iterator for # implementing an internal iterator. puts ext_each(o.to_enum) {|*x| puts x; [:b, *x] } # => [], [:b], [1], [:b, 1], [1, 2], [:b, 1, 2], 3
Raised to stop the iteration, in particular by Enumerator#next
. It is rescued by Kernel#loop
.
loop do puts "Hello" raise StopIteration puts "World" end puts "Done!"
produces:
Hello Done!
The most standard error types are subclasses of StandardError
. A rescue clause without an explicit Exception
class will rescue all StandardErrors (and only those).
def foo raise "Oups" end foo rescue "Hello" #=> "Hello"
On the other hand:
require 'does/not/exist' rescue "Hi"
raises the exception:
LoadError: no such file to load -- does/not/exist
Raised when memory allocation fails.
SystemCallError
is the base class for all low-level platform-dependent errors.
The errors available on the current platform are subclasses of SystemCallError
and are defined in the Errno
module.
File.open("does/not/exist")
raises the exception:
Errno::ENOENT: No such file or directory - does/not/exist
This library provides three different ways to delegate method calls to an object. The easiest to use is SimpleDelegator
. Pass an object to the constructor and all methods supported by the object will be delegated. This object can be changed later.
Going a step further, the top level DelegateClass method allows you to easily setup delegation through class inheritance. This is considerably more flexible and thus probably the most common use for this library.
Finally, if you need full control over the delegation scheme, you can inherit from the abstract class Delegator
and customize as needed. (If you find yourself needing this control, have a look at Forwardable which is also in the standard library. It may suit your needs better.)
SimpleDelegator’s implementation serves as a nice example of the use of Delegator:
class SimpleDelegator < Delegator def __getobj__ @delegate_sd_obj # return object we are delegating to, required end def __setobj__(obj) @delegate_sd_obj = obj # change delegation object, # a feature we're providing end end
Be advised, RDoc
will not detect delegated methods.
A concrete implementation of Delegator
, this class provides the means to delegate all supported method calls to the object passed into the constructor and even to change the object being delegated to at a later time with __setobj__
.
class User def born_on Date.new(1989, 9, 10) end end class UserDecorator < SimpleDelegator def birth_year born_on.year end end decorated_user = UserDecorator.new(User.new) decorated_user.birth_year #=> 1989 decorated_user.__getobj__ #=> #<User: ...>
A SimpleDelegator
instance can take advantage of the fact that SimpleDelegator
is a subclass of Delegator
to call super
to have methods called on the object being delegated to.
class SuperArray < SimpleDelegator def [](*args) super + 1 end end SuperArray.new([1])[0] #=> 2
Here’s a simple example that takes advantage of the fact that SimpleDelegator’s delegation object can be changed at any time.
class Stats def initialize @source = SimpleDelegator.new([]) end def stats(records) @source.__setobj__(records) "Elements: #{@source.size}\n" + " Non-Nil: #{@source.compact.size}\n" + " Unique: #{@source.uniq.size}\n" end end s = Stats.new puts s.stats(%w{James Edward Gray II}) puts puts s.stats([1, 2, 3, nil, 4, 5, 1, 2])
Prints:
Elements: 4 Non-Nil: 4 Unique: 4 Elements: 8 Non-Nil: 7 Unique: 6
The Vector
class represents a mathematical vector, which is useful in its own right, and also constitutes a row or column of a Matrix
.
Method
Catalogue To create a Vector:
Vector.elements
(array, copy = true)
Vector.basis
(size: n, index: k)
To access elements:
To enumerate the elements:
Properties of vectors:
Vector
arithmetic:
Vector
functions:
inner_product(v)
, dot(v)
cross_product(v)
, cross(v)
Conversion to other data types:
String representations:
Use the Monitor
class when you want to have a lock object for blocks with mutual exclusion.
require 'monitor' lock = Monitor.new lock.synchronize do # exclusive access end
Raised when given an invalid regexp expression.
Regexp.new("?")
raises the exception:
RegexpError: target of repeat operator is not specified: /?/
Raised when an invalid operation is attempted on a thread.
For example, when no other thread has been started:
Thread.stop
This will raises the following exception:
ThreadError: stopping only thread note: use sleep to stop forever
In concurrent programming, a monitor is an object or module intended to be used safely by more than one thread. The defining characteristic of a monitor is that its methods are executed with mutual exclusion. That is, at each point in time, at most one thread may be executing any of its methods. This mutual exclusion greatly simplifies reasoning about the implementation of monitors compared to reasoning about parallel code that updates a data structure.
You can read more about the general principles on the Wikipedia page for Monitors
require 'monitor.rb' buf = [] buf.extend(MonitorMixin) empty_cond = buf.new_cond # consumer Thread.start do loop do buf.synchronize do empty_cond.wait_while { buf.empty? } print buf.shift end end end # producer while line = ARGF.gets buf.synchronize do buf.push(line) empty_cond.signal end end
The consumer thread waits for the producer thread to push a line to buf while buf.empty?
. The producer thread (main thread) reads a line from ARGF
and pushes it into buf then calls empty_cond.signal
to notify the consumer thread of new data.
Class
include require 'monitor' class SynchronizedArray < Array include MonitorMixin def initialize(*args) super(*args) end alias :old_shift :shift alias :old_unshift :unshift def shift(n=1) self.synchronize do self.old_shift(n) end end def unshift(item) self.synchronize do self.old_unshift(item) end end # other methods ... end
SynchronizedArray
implements an Array with synchronized access to items. This Class
is implemented as subclass of Array which includes the MonitorMixin
module.
WIN32OLE_RECORD
objects represents VT_RECORD OLE variant. Win32OLE returns WIN32OLE_RECORD
object if the result value of invoking OLE methods.
If COM server in VB.NET ComServer project is the following:
Imports System.Runtime.InteropServices Public Class ComClass Public Structure Book <MarshalAs(UnmanagedType.BStr)> _ Public title As String Public cost As Integer End Structure Public Function getBook() As Book Dim book As New Book book.title = "The Ruby Book" book.cost = 20 Return book End Function End Class
then, you can retrieve getBook return value from the following Ruby script:
require 'win32ole' obj = WIN32OLE.new('ComServer.ComClass') book = obj.getBook book.class # => WIN32OLE_RECORD book.title # => "The Ruby Book" book.cost # => 20
This exception is raised if a generator or unparser error occurs.