Checks for a method provided by this the delegate object by forwarding the call through _getobj_.
Returns the value of the local variable symbol
.
def foo a = 1 binding.local_variable_get(:a) #=> 1 binding.local_variable_get(:b) #=> NameError end
This method is the short version of the following code:
binding.eval("#{symbol}")
Returns true
if a local variable symbol
exists.
def foo a = 1 binding.local_variable_defined?(:a) #=> true binding.local_variable_defined?(:b) #=> false end
This method is the short version of the following code:
binding.eval("defined?(#{symbol}) == 'local-variable'")
Returns the directories in the current shell’s PATH environment variable as an array of directory names. This sets the system_path
for all instances of Shell
.
Example: If in your current shell, you did:
$ echo $PATH /usr/bin:/bin:/usr/local/bin
Running this method in the above shell would then return:
["/usr/bin", "/bin", "/usr/local/bin"]
Sets the system_path
that new instances of Shell
should have as their initial system_path.
path
should be an array of directory name strings.
Returns the value of a thread local variable that has been set. Note that these are different than fiber local values. For fiber local values, please see Thread#[]
and Thread#[]=
.
Thread
local values are carried along with threads, and do not respect fibers. For example:
Thread.new { Thread.current.thread_variable_set("foo", "bar") # set a thread local Thread.current["foo"] = "bar" # set a fiber local Fiber.new { Fiber.yield [ Thread.current.thread_variable_get("foo"), # get the thread local Thread.current["foo"], # get the fiber local ] }.resume }.join.value # => ['bar', nil]
The value “bar” is returned for the thread local, where nil is returned for the fiber local. The fiber is executed in the same thread, so the thread local values are available.
Establishes proc on thr as the handler for tracing, or disables tracing if the parameter is nil
.
Establishes proc as the handler for tracing, or disables tracing if the parameter is nil
.
Note: this method is obsolete, please use TracePoint
instead.
proc takes up to six parameters:
an event name
a filename
a line number
an object id
a binding
the name of a class
proc is invoked whenever an event occurs.
Events are:
c-call
call a C-language routine
c-return
return from a C-language routine
call
call a Ruby method
class
start a class or module definition
end
finish a class or module definition
line
execute code on a new line
raise
raise an exception
return
return from a Ruby method
Tracing is disabled within the context of proc.
class Test def test a = 1 b = 2 end end set_trace_func proc { |event, file, line, id, binding, classname| printf "%8s %s:%-2d %10s %8s\n", event, file, line, id, classname } t = Test.new t.test line prog.rb:11 false c-call prog.rb:11 new Class c-call prog.rb:11 initialize Object c-return prog.rb:11 initialize Object c-return prog.rb:11 new Class line prog.rb:12 false call prog.rb:2 test Test line prog.rb:3 test Test line prog.rb:4 test Test return prog.rb:4 test Test
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
Return internal class of obj.
obj can be an instance of InternalObjectWrapper
.
Note that you should not use this method in your application.
Calls CRYPTO_mem_ctrl(CRYPTO_MEM_CHECK_ON). Starts tracking memory allocations. See also OpenSSL.print_mem_leaks
.
This is available only when built with a capable OpenSSL
and –enable-debug configure option.
Set
terminal size to rows
and columns
.
See GNU Readline’s rl_set_screen_size function.
Raises NotImplementedError
if the using readline library does not support.
Specifies VI editing mode. See the manual of GNU Readline
for details of VI editing mode.
Raises NotImplementedError
if the using readline library does not support.
Returns true if vi mode is active. Returns false if not.
Raises NotImplementedError
if the using readline library does not support.
Specifies Emacs editing mode. The default is this mode. See the manual of GNU Readline
for details of Emacs editing mode.
Raises NotImplementedError
if the using readline library does not support.
Returns true if emacs mode is active. Returns false if not.
Raises NotImplementedError
if the using readline library does not support.
Specifies a Proc
object proc
to call after the first prompt has been printed and just before readline starts reading input characters.
See GNU Readline’s rl_pre_input_hook variable.
Raises ArgumentError
if proc
does not respond to the call method.
Raises NotImplementedError
if the using readline library does not support.
Returns a Proc
object proc
to call after the first prompt has been printed and just before readline starts reading input characters. The default is nil.
Raises NotImplementedError
if the using readline library does not support.
Register a Gem::Specification
for default gem.
Two formats for the specification are supported:
MRI 2.0 style, where spec.files contains unprefixed require names. The spec’s filenames will be registered as-is.
New style, where spec.files contains files prefixed with paths from spec.require_paths. The prefixes are stripped before registering the spec’s filenames. Unprefixed files are omitted.