Divides by the specified value, and returns the quotient and modulus as BigDecimal
numbers. The quotient is rounded towards negative infinity.
For example:
require 'bigdecimal' a = BigDecimal("42") b = BigDecimal("9") q, m = a.divmod(b) c = q * b + m a == c #=> true
The quotient q is (a/b).floor, and the modulus is the amount that must be added to q * b to get a.
Puts ios into binary mode. Once a stream is in binary mode, it cannot be reset to nonbinary mode.
newline conversion disabled
encoding conversion disabled
content is treated as ASCII-8BIT
Returns true
if ios is binmode.
Turns the database’s fast mode on or off. If fast mode is turned on, gdbm does not wait for writes to be flushed to the disk before continuing.
This option is obsolete for gdbm >= 1.8 since fast mode is turned on by default. See also: syncmode=
Puts ARGF
into binary mode. Once a stream is in binary mode, it cannot be reset to non-binary mode. This option has the following effects:
Newline conversion is disabled.
Encoding
conversion is disabled.
Content is treated as ASCII-8BIT.
Returns true if ARGF
is being read in binary mode; false otherwise. To enable binary mode use ARGF.binmode
.
For example:
ARGF.binmode? #=> false ARGF.binmode ARGF.binmode? #=> true
Returns a BubbleBabble encoded version of a given string.
Changes permission bits on the named files (in list
) to the bit pattern represented by mode
.
mode
is the symbolic and absolute mode can be used.
Absolute mode is
FileUtils.chmod 0755, 'somecommand' FileUtils.chmod 0644, %w(my.rb your.rb his.rb her.rb) FileUtils.chmod 0755, '/usr/bin/ruby', :verbose => true
Symbolic mode is
FileUtils.chmod "u=wrx,go=rx", 'somecommand' FileUtils.chmod "u=wr,go=rr", %w(my.rb your.rb his.rb her.rb) FileUtils.chmod "u=wrx,go=rx", '/usr/bin/ruby', :verbose => true
is user, group, other mask.
is user’s mask.
is group’s mask.
is other’s mask.
is write permission.
is read permission.
is execute permission.
is execute permission for directories only, must be used in conjunction with “+”
is uid, gid.
is sticky bit.
is added to a class given the specified mode.
Is removed from a given class given mode.
Is the exact nature of the class will be given a specified mode.
Changes permission bits on the named files (in list
) to the bit pattern represented by mode
.
mode
is the symbolic and absolute mode can be used.
Absolute mode is
FileUtils.chmod 0755, 'somecommand' FileUtils.chmod 0644, %w(my.rb your.rb his.rb her.rb) FileUtils.chmod 0755, '/usr/bin/ruby', :verbose => true
Symbolic mode is
FileUtils.chmod "u=wrx,go=rx", 'somecommand' FileUtils.chmod "u=wr,go=rr", %w(my.rb your.rb his.rb her.rb) FileUtils.chmod "u=wrx,go=rx", '/usr/bin/ruby', :verbose => true
is user, group, other mask.
is user’s mask.
is group’s mask.
is other’s mask.
is write permission.
is read permission.
is execute permission.
is execute permission for directories only, must be used in conjunction with “+”
is uid, gid.
is sticky bit.
is added to a class given the specified mode.
Is removed from a given class given mode.
Is the exact nature of the class will be given a specified mode.
Changes permission bits on the named files (in list
) to the bit pattern represented by mode
.
FileUtils.chmod_R 0700, "/tmp/app.#{$$}" FileUtils.chmod_R "u=wrx", "/tmp/app.#{$$}"
Changes permission bits on the named files (in list
) to the bit pattern represented by mode
.
FileUtils.chmod_R 0700, "/tmp/app.#{$$}" FileUtils.chmod_R "u=wrx", "/tmp/app.#{$$}"
When invoked with a block, yield all repeated permutations of length n
of the elements of the array, then return the array itself.
The implementation makes no guarantees about the order in which the repeated permutations are yielded.
If no block is given, an Enumerator
is returned instead.
Examples:
a = [1, 2] a.repeated_permutation(1).to_a #=> [[1], [2]] a.repeated_permutation(2).to_a #=> [[1,1],[1,2],[2,1],[2,2]] a.repeated_permutation(3).to_a #=> [[1,1,1],[1,1,2],[1,2,1],[1,2,2], # [2,1,1],[2,1,2],[2,2,1],[2,2,2]] a.repeated_permutation(0).to_a #=> [[]] # one permutation of length 0
When invoked with a block, yields all repeated combinations of length n
of elements from the array and then returns the array itself.
The implementation makes no guarantees about the order in which the repeated combinations are yielded.
If no block is given, an Enumerator
is returned instead.
Examples:
a = [1, 2, 3] a.repeated_combination(1).to_a #=> [[1], [2], [3]] a.repeated_combination(2).to_a #=> [[1,1],[1,2],[1,3],[2,2],[2,3],[3,3]] a.repeated_combination(3).to_a #=> [[1,1,1],[1,1,2],[1,1,3],[1,2,2],[1,2,3], # [1,3,3],[2,2,2],[2,2,3],[2,3,3],[3,3,3]] a.repeated_combination(4).to_a #=> [[1,1,1,1],[1,1,1,2],[1,1,1,3],[1,1,2,2],[1,1,2,3], # [1,1,3,3],[1,2,2,2],[1,2,2,3],[1,2,3,3],[1,3,3,3], # [2,2,2,2],[2,2,2,3],[2,2,3,3],[2,3,3,3],[3,3,3,3]] a.repeated_combination(0).to_a #=> [[]] # one combination of length 0
Returns any backtrace associated with the exception. This method is similar to Exception#backtrace
, but the backtrace is an array of Thread::Backtrace::Location
.
Now, this method is not affected by Exception#set_backtrace()
.
Requests a connection to be made on the given remote_sockaddr
after O_NONBLOCK is set for the underlying file descriptor. Returns 0 if successful, otherwise an exception is raised.
# +remote_sockaddr+ - the +struct+ sockaddr contained in a string or Addrinfo object
# Pull down Google's web page require 'socket' include Socket::Constants socket = Socket.new(AF_INET, SOCK_STREAM, 0) sockaddr = Socket.sockaddr_in(80, 'www.google.com') begin # emulate blocking connect socket.connect_nonblock(sockaddr) rescue IO::WaitWritable IO.select(nil, [socket]) # wait 3-way handshake completion begin socket.connect_nonblock(sockaddr) # check connection failure rescue Errno::EISCONN end end socket.write("GET / HTTP/1.0\r\n\r\n") results = socket.read
Refer to Socket#connect
for the exceptions that may be thrown if the call to connect_nonblock fails.
Socket#connect_nonblock
may raise any error corresponding to connect(2) failure, including Errno::EINPROGRESS.
If the exception is Errno::EINPROGRESS, it is extended by IO::WaitWritable
. So IO::WaitWritable
can be used to rescue the exceptions for retrying connect_nonblock.
By specifying a keyword argument exception to false
, you can indicate that connect_nonblock
should not raise an IO::WaitWritable
exception, but return the symbol :wait_writable
instead.
# Socket#connect
Returns true
if unconverted_fields() to parsed results. See CSV::new
for details.
Set
options. Takes the same argument as GetoptLong.new
.
Raises a RuntimeError
if option processing has already started.
‘get_option’ is an alias of ‘get’.
‘each_option’ is an alias of ‘each’.