Results for: "slice"

The line number of the last row read from this file.

Specify line number of the last row read from this file.

See Zlib::GzipReader documentation for a description.

This is a deprecated alias for each_line.

See Zlib::GzipReader documentation for a description.

Returns the number of hard links to stat.

File.stat("testfile").nlink             #=> 1
File.link("testfile", "testfile.bak")   #=> 0
File.stat("testfile").nlink             #=> 2

Returns true if stat is a symbolic link, false if it isn’t or if the operating system doesn’t support this feature. As File::stat automatically follows symbolic links, symlink? will always be false for an object returned by File::stat.

File.symlink("testfile", "alink")   #=> 0
File.stat("alink").symlink?         #=> false
File.lstat("alink").symlink?        #=> true

Returns true if stat has its sticky bit set, false if it doesn’t or if the operating system doesn’t support this feature.

File.stat("testfile").sticky?   #=> false
No documentation available

Normalize the list of files so that:

Checks that the specification contains all required fields, and does a very basic sanity check.

Raises InvalidSpecificationException if the spec does not pass the checks..

True if the dependency will not always match the latest version.

True if the requirement will not always match the latest version.

Sends a TRACE request to the path and gets a response, as an HTTPResponse object.

No documentation available
No documentation available

Create a DRbUnknownError exception containing this object.

Is this server alive?

No documentation available

Symmetric Householder reduction to tridiagonal form.

Symmetric tridiagonal QL algorithm.

Puts the connection into ASCII (text) mode, issues the given command, and passes the resulting data, one line at a time, to the associated block. If no block is given, prints the lines. Note that cmd is a server command (such as “RETR myfile”).

Puts the connection into ASCII (text) mode, issues the given server-side command (such as “STOR myfile”), and sends the contents of the file named file to the server, one line at a time. If the optional block is given, it also passes it the lines.

Returns an array of file information in the directory (the output is like ‘ls -l`). If a block is given, it iterates through the listing.

Sends a CAPABILITY command, and returns an array of capabilities that the server supports. Each capability is a string. See [IMAP] for a list of possible capabilities.

Note that the Net::IMAP class does not modify its behaviour according to the capabilities of the server; it is up to the user of the class to ensure that a certain capability is supported by a server before using it.

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