YAMLTree
builds a YAML ast given a Ruby object. For example:
builder = Psych::Visitors::YAMLTree.new builder << { :foo => 'bar' } builder.tree # => #<Psych::Nodes::Stream .. }
Default formatter for log messages.
Raised when the data length recorded in the gzip file footer is not equivalent to the length of the actual uncompressed data.
In-memory session storage class.
Implements session storage as a global in-memory hash. Session
data will only persist for as long as the Ruby interpreter instance does.
Net::IMAP::BodyTypeMessage
represents MESSAGE/RFC822 body structures of messages.
Returns a Net::IMAP::Envelope giving the envelope structure.
Returns an object giving the body structure.
And Net::IMAP::BodyTypeMessage
has all methods of Net::IMAP::BodyTypeText
.
Net::IMAP::BodyTypeMultipart
represents multipart body structures of messages.
Returns the content media type name as defined in [MIME-IMB].
Returns the content subtype name as defined in [MIME-IMB].
Returns multiple parts.
Returns a hash that represents parameters as defined in [MIME-IMB].
Returns a Net::IMAP::ContentDisposition object giving the content disposition.
Returns a string or an array of strings giving the body language value as defined in [LANGUAGE-TAGS].
Returns extension data.
Returns true.
Error
raised when a response from the server is non-parseable.
Switch
that takes no arguments.
Switch
that takes an argument.
Switch
that takes an argument, which does not begin with ‘-’.
This API is experimental, and subject to change.
parser = PullParser.new( "<a>text<b att='val'/>txet</a>" ) while parser.has_next? res = parser.next puts res[1]['att'] if res.start_tag? and res[0] == 'b' end
See the PullEvent
class for information on the content of the results. The data is identical to the arguments passed for the various events to the StreamListener
API.
Notice that:
parser = PullParser.new( "<a>BAD DOCUMENT" ) while parser.has_next? res = parser.next raise res[1] if res.error? end
Nat Price gave me some good ideas for the API.
This API is experimental, and subject to change.
parser = PullParser.new( "<a>text<b att='val'/>txet</a>" ) while parser.has_next? res = parser.next puts res[1]['att'] if res.start_tag? and res[0] == 'b' end
See the PullEvent
class for information on the content of the results. The data is identical to the arguments passed for the various events to the StreamListener
API.
Notice that:
parser = PullParser.new( "<a>BAD DOCUMENT" ) while parser.has_next? res = parser.next raise res[1] if res.error? end
Nat Price gave me some good ideas for the API.