Finds a spec and the source_uri it came from for gem gem_name
and version
. Returns an Array
of specs and sources required for installation of the gem.
In case we’re building docs in a background process, this method waits for that process to exit (or if it’s already been reaped, or never happened, swallows the Errno::ECHILD error).
Returns a new lazy enumerator with the concatenated results of running block once for every element in lazy.
["foo", "bar"].lazy.flat_map {|i| i.each_char.lazy}.force #=> ["f", "o", "o", "b", "a", "r"]
A value x returned by block is decomposed if either of the following conditions is true:
a) <i>x</i> responds to both each and force, which means that <i>x</i> is a lazy enumerator. b) <i>x</i> is an array or responds to to_ary.
Otherwise, x is contained as-is in the return value.
[{a:1}, {b:2}].lazy.flat_map {|i| i}.force #=> [{:a=>1}, {:b=>2}]
Tests bit bit in bn and returns true
if set, false
if not set.
Emit a scalar with value
and tag
This method is called when a parse error is found.
ERROR_TOKEN_ID is an internal ID of token which caused error. You can get string representation of this ID by calling token_to_str
.
ERROR_VALUE is a value of error token.
value_stack is a stack of symbol values. DO NOT MODIFY this object.
This method raises ParseError
by default.
If this method returns, parsers enter “error recovering mode”.
This method is called when some event handler is undefined. event
is :on_XXX, token
is the scanned token, and data
is a data accumulator.
The return value of this method is passed to the next event handler (as of Enumerable#inject
).
Same as IO
.
See Zlib::GzipReader
documentation for a description.
Returns true
if stat is writable by the real user id of this process.
File.stat("testfile").writable_real? #=> true
If stat is writable by others, returns an integer representing the file permission bits of stat. Returns nil
otherwise. The meaning of the bits is platform dependent; on Unix systems, see stat(2)
.
m = File.stat("/tmp").world_writable? #=> 511 sprintf("%o", m) #=> "777"
Iterates over keys and objects in a weakly referenced object
Returns serialized iseq binary format data as a String
object. A corresponding iseq object is created by RubyVM::InstructionSequence.load_from_binary()
method.
String
extra_data will be saved with binary data. You can access this data with RubyVM::InstructionSequence.load_from_binary_extra_data(binary)
.
Note that the translated binary data is not portable. You can not move this binary data to another machine. You can not use the binary data which is created by another version/another architecture of Ruby.
Returns the absolute path of this instruction sequence.
nil
if the iseq was evaluated from a string.
For example, using ::compile_file
:
# /tmp/method.rb def hello puts "hello, world" end # in irb > iseq = RubyVM::InstructionSequence.compile_file('/tmp/method.rb') > iseq.absolute_path #=> /tmp/method.rb