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Args

v

String

Description

Public setter for the scheme component v (with validation).

See also URI::Generic.check_scheme.

Usage

require 'uri'

uri = URI.parse("http://my.example.com")
uri.scheme = "https"
uri.to_s  #=> "https://my.example.com"

Args

v

String

Description

Public setter for the path component v (with validation).

See also URI::Generic.check_path.

Usage

require 'uri'

uri = URI.parse("http://my.example.com/pub/files")
uri.path = "/faq/"
uri.to_s  #=> "http://my.example.com/faq/"

Returns true if URI is hierarchical.

Description

URI has components listed in order of decreasing significance from left to right, see RFC3986 tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3986 1.2.3.

Usage

require 'uri'

uri = URI.parse("http://my.example.com/")
uri.hierarchical?
#=> true
uri = URI.parse("mailto:joe@example.com")
uri.hierarchical?
#=> false

Returns true if URI does not have a scheme (e.g. http:// or https://) specified.

Returns normalized URI.

require 'uri'

URI("HTTP://my.EXAMPLE.com").normalize
#=> #<URI::HTTP http://my.example.com/>

Normalization here means:

Destructive version of normalize.

Returns attributes.

Setter for attributes val.

Checks if URI has a path. For URI::LDAP this will return false.

Iterates over the request headers

Sets the response’s status to the status code

Iterates over each header in the response

Will this response body be returned using chunked transfer-encoding?

Enables chunked transfer encoding.

Shortcut for logging a FATAL message

Will the logger output FATAL messages?

Updates the database with multiple values from the specified object. Takes any object which implements the each_pair method, including Hash and DBM objects.

Returns self.

No documentation available

Returns the least significant eight bits of the return code of stat. Only available if exited? is true.

fork { }           #=> 26572
Process.wait       #=> 26572
$?.exited?         #=> true
$?.exitstatus      #=> 0

fork { exit 99 }   #=> 26573
Process.wait       #=> 26573
$?.exited?         #=> true
$?.exitstatus      #=> 99

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>,

Updates the digest using a given string and returns self.

The update() method and the left-shift operator are overridden by each implementation subclass. (One should be an alias for the other)

Construct a new class given a C:

Fiddle::Importer#struct and Fiddle::Importer#union wrap this functionality in an easy-to-use manner.

Example:

require 'fiddle/struct'
require 'fiddle/cparser'

include Fiddle::CParser

types, members = parse_struct_signature(['int i','char c'])

MyStruct = Fiddle::CStructBuilder.create(Fiddle::CUnion, types, members)

obj = MyStruct.allocate

Construct a new class given a C:

Fiddle::Importer#struct and Fiddle::Importer#union wrap this functionality in an easy-to-use manner.

Example:

require 'fiddle/struct'
require 'fiddle/cparser'

include Fiddle::CParser

types, members = parse_struct_signature(['int i','char c'])

MyStruct = Fiddle::CStructBuilder.create(Fiddle::CUnion, types, members)

obj = MyStruct.allocate

See IO#readchar.

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