str
String
to search
schemes
Patterns to apply to str
Attempts to parse and merge a set of URIs. If no block
given, then returns the result, else it calls block
for each element in result.
See also URI::Parser.make_regexp
.
Removes escapes from str
.
str
String
to search
schemes
Patterns to apply to str
Attempts to parse and merge a set of URIs. If no block
given, then returns the result, else it calls block
for each element in result.
See also URI::Parser.make_regexp
.
Removes escapes from str
.
for IO.copy_stream
. Note: we may return a larger string than size
here; but IO.copy_stream
does not care.
Will this response body be returned using chunked transfer-encoding?
Enables chunked transfer encoding.
Processes requests on sock
Converts version
into an HTTPVersion
You must subclass GenericServer
and implement #run which accepts a TCP client socket
Converts the contents of the database to an in-memory Hash
, then calls Hash#reject
with the specified code block, returning a new Hash
.
Override the inspection method.
system("false") p $?.inspect #=> "#<Process::Status: pid 12861 exit 1>"
Returns a printable version of ec
ec = Encoding::Converter.new("iso-8859-1", "utf-8") puts ec.inspect #=> #<Encoding::Converter: ISO-8859-1 to UTF-8>
Returns the conversion path of ec.
The result is an array of conversions.
ec = Encoding::Converter.new("ISO-8859-1", "EUC-JP", crlf_newline: true) p ec.convpath #=> [[#<Encoding:ISO-8859-1>, #<Encoding:UTF-8>], # [#<Encoding:UTF-8>, #<Encoding:EUC-JP>], # "crlf_newline"]
Each element of the array is a pair of encodings or a string. A pair means an encoding conversion. A string means a decorator.
In the above example, [#<Encoding:ISO-8859-1>,
Convert source_string and return destination_string.
source_string is assumed as a part of source. i.e. :partial_input=>true is specified internally. finish method should be used last.
ec = Encoding::Converter.new("utf-8", "euc-jp") puts ec.convert("\u3042").dump #=> "\xA4\xA2" puts ec.finish.dump #=> "" ec = Encoding::Converter.new("euc-jp", "utf-8") puts ec.convert("\xA4").dump #=> "" puts ec.convert("\xA2").dump #=> "\xE3\x81\x82" puts ec.finish.dump #=> "" ec = Encoding::Converter.new("utf-8", "iso-2022-jp") puts ec.convert("\xE3").dump #=> "".force_encoding("ISO-2022-JP") puts ec.convert("\x81").dump #=> "".force_encoding("ISO-2022-JP") puts ec.convert("\x82").dump #=> "\e$B$\"".force_encoding("ISO-2022-JP") puts ec.finish.dump #=> "\e(B".force_encoding("ISO-2022-JP")
If a conversion error occur, Encoding::UndefinedConversionError
or Encoding::InvalidByteSequenceError
is raised. Encoding::Converter#convert
doesn’t supply methods to recover or restart from these exceptions. When you want to handle these conversion errors, use Encoding::Converter#primitive_convert
.
Creates a printable version of the digest object.
Creates a class to wrap the C struct described by signature
.
MyStruct = struct ['int i', 'char c']
Similar to read, but raises EOFError
at end of string instead of returning nil
, as well as IO#sysread
does.
Reads at most maxlen bytes from the stream. If buf is provided it must reference a string which will receive the data.
See IO#readpartial
for full details.
Pushes character c back onto the stream such that a subsequent buffered character read will return it.
Unlike IO#getc
multiple bytes may be pushed back onto the stream.
Has no effect on unbuffered reads (such as sysread).