Results for: "String#[]"

Returns a string for DNS reverse lookup compatible with RFC1886.

Creates a Range object for the network address.

No documentation available
No documentation available

Returns the names of the binding’s local variables as symbols.

def foo
  a = 1
  2.times do |n|
    binding.local_variables #=> [:a, :n]
  end
end

This method is the short version of the following code:

binding.eval("local_variables")
No documentation available

Returns range or nil

No documentation available

Called for dup & clone.

No documentation available

Private. Use Matrix#determinant

Returns the determinant of the matrix, using Bareiss’ multistep integer-preserving gaussian elimination. It has the same computational cost order O(n^3) as standard Gaussian elimination. Intermediate results are fraction free and of lower complexity. A matrix of Integers will have thus intermediate results that are also Integers, with smaller bignums (if any), while a matrix of Float will usually have intermediate results with better precision.

No documentation available

Called for dup & clone.

Returns the inner product of this vector with the other.

Vector[4,7].inner_product Vector[10,1]  => 47

Returns an angle with another vector. Result is within the [0..Math::PI].

Vector[1,0].angle_with(Vector[0,1])
# => Math::PI / 2
No documentation available
No documentation available
No documentation available
No documentation available

Returns the portion of the original string after the current match. Equivalent to the special variable $'.

m = /(.)(.)(\d+)(\d)/.match("THX1138: The Movie")
m.post_match   #=> ": The Movie"

Returns the factorization of value.

Parameters

value

An arbitrary integer.

generator

Optional. A pseudo-prime generator. generator.succ must return the next pseudo-prime number in the ascending order. It must generate all prime numbers, but may also generate non prime numbers too.

Exceptions

ZeroDivisionError

when value is zero.

Example

For an arbitrary integer:

n = p_1**e_1 * p_2**e_2 * .... * p_n**e_n,

prime_division(n) returns:

[[p_1, e_1], [p_2, e_2], ...., [p_n, e_n]].

Prime.prime_division(12) #=> [[2,2], [3,1]]
No documentation available

List of options that will be supplied to RDoc

Dup internal hash.

Clone internal hash.

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