Returns a status string for the response.
Returns the error string corresponding to the error code retrieved by error
.
Returns the value returned by method name
.
Pseudo I/O on String
object, with interface corresponding to IO
.
Commonly used to simulate $stdio
or $stderr
require 'stringio' # Writing stream emulation io = StringIO.new io.puts "Hello World" io.string #=> "Hello World\n" # Reading stream emulation io = StringIO.new "first\nsecond\nlast\n" io.getc #=> "f" io.gets #=> "irst\n" io.read #=> "second\nlast\n"
StringScanner
provides for lexical scanning operations on a String
. Here is an example of its usage:
s = StringScanner.new('This is an example string') s.eos? # -> false p s.scan(/\w+/) # -> "This" p s.scan(/\w+/) # -> nil p s.scan(/\s+/) # -> " " p s.scan(/\s+/) # -> nil p s.scan(/\w+/) # -> "is" s.eos? # -> false p s.scan(/\s+/) # -> " " p s.scan(/\w+/) # -> "an" p s.scan(/\s+/) # -> " " p s.scan(/\w+/) # -> "example" p s.scan(/\s+/) # -> " " p s.scan(/\w+/) # -> "string" s.eos? # -> true p s.scan(/\s+/) # -> nil p s.scan(/\w+/) # -> nil
Scanning a string means remembering the position of a scan pointer, which is just an index. The point of scanning is to move forward a bit at a time, so matches are sought after the scan pointer; usually immediately after it.
Given the string “test string”, here are the pertinent scan pointer positions:
t e s t s t r i n g 0 1 2 ... 1 0
When you scan
for a pattern (a regular expression), the match must occur at the character after the scan pointer. If you use scan_until
, then the match can occur anywhere after the scan pointer. In both cases, the scan pointer moves just beyond the last character of the match, ready to scan again from the next character onwards. This is demonstrated by the example above.
Method
Categories There are other methods besides the plain scanners. You can look ahead in the string without actually scanning. You can access the most recent match. You can modify the string being scanned, reset or terminate the scanner, find out or change the position of the scan pointer, skip ahead, and so on.
beginning_of_line?
(#bol?
)
There are aliases to several of the methods.
Objects of class Binding
encapsulate the execution context at some particular place in the code and retain this context for future use. The variables, methods, value of self
, and possibly an iterator block that can be accessed in this context are all retained. Binding
objects can be created using Kernel#binding
, and are made available to the callback of Kernel#set_trace_func
and instances of TracePoint
.
These binding objects can be passed as the second argument of the Kernel#eval
method, establishing an environment for the evaluation.
class Demo def initialize(n) @secret = n end def get_binding binding end end k1 = Demo.new(99) b1 = k1.get_binding k2 = Demo.new(-3) b2 = k2.get_binding eval("@secret", b1) #=> 99 eval("@secret", b2) #=> -3 eval("@secret") #=> nil
Binding
objects have no class-specific methods.
An Encoding
instance represents a character encoding usable in Ruby. It is defined as a constant under the Encoding
namespace. It has a name and optionally, aliases:
Encoding::ISO_8859_1.name #=> "ISO-8859-1" Encoding::ISO_8859_1.names #=> ["ISO-8859-1", "ISO8859-1"]
Ruby methods dealing with encodings return or accept Encoding
instances as arguments (when a method accepts an Encoding
instance as an argument, it can be passed an Encoding
name or alias instead).
"some string".encoding #=> #<Encoding:UTF-8> string = "some string".encode(Encoding::ISO_8859_1) #=> "some string" string.encoding #=> #<Encoding:ISO-8859-1> "some string".encode "ISO-8859-1" #=> "some string"
Encoding::ASCII_8BIT is a special encoding that is usually used for a byte string, not a character string. But as the name insists, its characters in the range of ASCII are considered as ASCII characters. This is useful when you use ASCII-8BIT characters with other ASCII compatible characters.
The associated Encoding
of a String
can be changed in two different ways.
First, it is possible to set the Encoding
of a string to a new Encoding
without changing the internal byte representation of the string, with String#force_encoding
. This is how you can tell Ruby the correct encoding of a string.
string #=> "R\xC3\xA9sum\xC3\xA9" string.encoding #=> #<Encoding:ISO-8859-1> string.force_encoding(Encoding::UTF_8) #=> "R\u00E9sum\u00E9"
Second, it is possible to transcode a string, i.e. translate its internal byte representation to another encoding. Its associated encoding is also set to the other encoding. See String#encode
for the various forms of transcoding, and the Encoding::Converter
class for additional control over the transcoding process.
string #=> "R\u00E9sum\u00E9" string.encoding #=> #<Encoding:UTF-8> string = string.encode!(Encoding::ISO_8859_1) #=> "R\xE9sum\xE9" string.encoding #=> #<Encoding::ISO-8859-1>
All Ruby script code has an associated Encoding
which any String
literal created in the source code will be associated to.
The default script encoding is Encoding::UTF_8 after v2.0, but it can be changed by a magic comment on the first line of the source code file (or second line, if there is a shebang line on the first). The comment must contain the word coding
or encoding
, followed by a colon, space and the Encoding
name or alias:
# encoding: UTF-8 "some string".encoding #=> #<Encoding:UTF-8>
The __ENCODING__
keyword returns the script encoding of the file which the keyword is written:
# encoding: ISO-8859-1 __ENCODING__ #=> #<Encoding:ISO-8859-1>
ruby -K
will change the default locale encoding, but this is not recommended. Ruby source files should declare its script encoding by a magic comment even when they only depend on US-ASCII strings or regular expressions.
The default encoding of the environment. Usually derived from locale.
see Encoding.locale_charmap
, Encoding.find
(‘locale’)
The default encoding of strings from the filesystem of the environment. This is used for strings of file names or paths.
see Encoding.find
(‘filesystem’)
Each IO
object has an external encoding which indicates the encoding that Ruby will use to read its data. By default Ruby sets the external encoding of an IO
object to the default external encoding. The default external encoding is set by locale encoding or the interpreter -E
option. Encoding.default_external
returns the current value of the external encoding.
ENV["LANG"] #=> "UTF-8" Encoding.default_external #=> #<Encoding:UTF-8> $ ruby -E ISO-8859-1 -e "p Encoding.default_external" #<Encoding:ISO-8859-1> $ LANG=C ruby -e 'p Encoding.default_external' #<Encoding:US-ASCII>
The default external encoding may also be set through Encoding.default_external=
, but you should not do this as strings created before and after the change will have inconsistent encodings. Instead use ruby -E
to invoke ruby with the correct external encoding.
When you know that the actual encoding of the data of an IO
object is not the default external encoding, you can reset its external encoding with IO#set_encoding
or set it at IO
object creation (see IO.new
options).
To process the data of an IO
object which has an encoding different from its external encoding, you can set its internal encoding. Ruby will use this internal encoding to transcode the data when it is read from the IO
object.
Conversely, when data is written to the IO
object it is transcoded from the internal encoding to the external encoding of the IO
object.
The internal encoding of an IO
object can be set with IO#set_encoding
or at IO
object creation (see IO.new
options).
The internal encoding is optional and when not set, the Ruby default internal encoding is used. If not explicitly set this default internal encoding is nil
meaning that by default, no transcoding occurs.
The default internal encoding can be set with the interpreter option -E
. Encoding.default_internal
returns the current internal encoding.
$ ruby -e 'p Encoding.default_internal' nil $ ruby -E ISO-8859-1:UTF-8 -e "p [Encoding.default_external, \ Encoding.default_internal]" [#<Encoding:ISO-8859-1>, #<Encoding:UTF-8>]
The default internal encoding may also be set through Encoding.default_internal=
, but you should not do this as strings created before and after the change will have inconsistent encodings. Instead use ruby -E
to invoke ruby with the correct internal encoding.
IO
encoding example In the following example a UTF-8 encoded string “Ru00E9sumu00E9” is transcoded for output to ISO-8859-1 encoding, then read back in and transcoded to UTF-8:
string = "R\u00E9sum\u00E9" open("transcoded.txt", "w:ISO-8859-1") do |io| io.write(string) end puts "raw text:" p File.binread("transcoded.txt") puts open("transcoded.txt", "r:ISO-8859-1:UTF-8") do |io| puts "transcoded text:" p io.read end
While writing the file, the internal encoding is not specified as it is only necessary for reading. While reading the file both the internal and external encoding must be specified to obtain the correct result.
$ ruby t.rb raw text: "R\xE9sum\xE9" transcoded text: "R\u00E9sum\u00E9"
EncodingError
is the base class for encoding errors.
A Struct
is a convenient way to bundle a number of attributes together, using accessor methods, without having to write an explicit class.
The Struct
class generates new subclasses that hold a set of members and their values. For each member a reader and writer method is created similar to Module#attr_accessor
.
Customer = Struct.new(:name, :address) do def greeting "Hello #{name}!" end end dave = Customer.new("Dave", "123 Main") dave.name #=> "Dave" dave.greeting #=> "Hello Dave!"
See Struct::new
for further examples of creating struct subclasses and instances.
In the method descriptions that follow, a “member” parameter refers to a struct member which is either a quoted string ("name"
) or a Symbol
(:name
).
An OpenStruct
is a data structure, similar to a Hash
, that allows the definition of arbitrary attributes with their accompanying values. This is accomplished by using Ruby’s metaprogramming to define methods on the class itself.
require "ostruct" person = OpenStruct.new person.name = "John Smith" person.age = 70 person.name # => "John Smith" person.age # => 70 person.address # => nil
An OpenStruct
employs a Hash
internally to store the attributes and values and can even be initialized with one:
australia = OpenStruct.new(:country => "Australia", :capital => "Canberra") # => #<OpenStruct country="Australia", capital="Canberra">
Hash
keys with spaces or characters that could normally not be used for method calls (e.g. ()[]*
) will not be immediately available on the OpenStruct
object as a method for retrieval or assignment, but can still be reached through the Object#send
method or using [].
measurements = OpenStruct.new("length (in inches)" => 24) measurements[:"length (in inches)"] # => 24 measurements.send("length (in inches)") # => 24 message = OpenStruct.new(:queued? => true) message.queued? # => true message.send("queued?=", false) message.queued? # => false
Removing the presence of an attribute requires the execution of the delete_field
method as setting the property value to nil
will not remove the attribute.
first_pet = OpenStruct.new(:name => "Rowdy", :owner => "John Smith") second_pet = OpenStruct.new(:name => "Rowdy") first_pet.owner = nil first_pet # => #<OpenStruct name="Rowdy", owner=nil> first_pet == second_pet # => false first_pet.delete_field(:owner) first_pet # => #<OpenStruct name="Rowdy"> first_pet == second_pet # => true
Ractor
compatibility: A frozen OpenStruct
with shareable values is itself shareable.
An OpenStruct
utilizes Ruby’s method lookup structure to find and define the necessary methods for properties. This is accomplished through the methods method_missing and define_singleton_method.
This should be a consideration if there is a concern about the performance of the objects that are created, as there is much more overhead in the setting of these properties compared to using a Hash
or a Struct
. Creating an open struct from a small Hash
and accessing a few of the entries can be 200 times slower than accessing the hash directly.
This is a potential security issue; building OpenStruct
from untrusted user data (e.g. JSON
web request) may be susceptible to a “symbol denial of service” attack since the keys create methods and names of methods are never garbage collected.
This may also be the source of incompatibilities between Ruby versions:
o = OpenStruct.new o.then # => nil in Ruby < 2.6, enumerator for Ruby >= 2.6
Builtin methods may be overwritten this way, which may be a source of bugs or security issues:
o = OpenStruct.new o.methods # => [:to_h, :marshal_load, :marshal_dump, :each_pair, ... o.methods = [:foo, :bar] o.methods # => [:foo, :bar]
To help remedy clashes, OpenStruct
uses only protected/private methods ending with ‘!` and defines aliases for builtin public methods by adding a `!`:
o = OpenStruct.new(make: 'Bentley', class: :luxury) o.class # => :luxury o.class! # => OpenStruct
It is recommended (but not enforced) to not use fields ending in ‘!`; Note that a subclass’ methods may not be overwritten, nor can OpenStruct’s own methods ending with ‘!`.
For all these reasons, consider not using OpenStruct
at all.
The Matrix
class represents a mathematical matrix. It provides methods for creating matrices, operating on them arithmetically and algebraically, and determining their mathematical properties such as trace, rank, inverse, determinant, or eigensystem.
This class implements a pretty printing algorithm. It finds line breaks and nice indentations for grouped structure.
By default, the class assumes that primitive elements are strings and each byte in the strings have single column in width. But it can be used for other situations by giving suitable arguments for some methods:
newline object and space generation block for PrettyPrint.new
optional width argument for PrettyPrint#text
There are several candidate uses:
text formatting using proportional fonts
multibyte characters which has columns different to number of bytes
non-string formatting
Box based formatting?
Other (better) model/algorithm?
Report any bugs at bugs.ruby-lang.org
Christian Lindig, Strictly Pretty, March 2000, www.st.cs.uni-sb.de/~lindig/papers/#pretty
Philip Wadler, A prettier printer, March 1998, homepages.inf.ed.ac.uk/wadler/topics/language-design.html#prettier
Tanaka Akira <akr@fsij.org>
Raised in case of a stack overflow.
def me_myself_and_i me_myself_and_i end me_myself_and_i
raises the exception:
SystemStackError: stack level too deep