Module
that defines the default UserInteraction
. Any class including this module will have access to the ui
method that returns the default UI.
Potentially raised when a specification is validated.
Represents an error communicating via HTTP.
Raised by Resolver when a dependency requests a gem for which there is no spec.
Keyword completion module. This allows partial arguments to be specified and resolved against a list of acceptable values.
Mixin methods for local and remote Gem::Command
options.
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"
Raised when a feature is not implemented on the current platform. For example, methods depending on the fsync
or fork
system calls may raise this exception if the underlying operating system or Ruby runtime does not support them.
Note that if fork
raises a NotImplementedError
, then respond_to?(:fork)
returns false
.
EncodingError
is the base class for encoding errors.
Use the Monitor
class when you want to have a lock object for blocks with mutual exclusion.
require 'monitor' lock = Monitor.new lock.synchronize do # exclusive access end
Copyright © 2000-2007 Minero Aoki
This program is free software. You can distribute/modify this program under the same terms of ruby.
FileUtils
Namespace for several file utility methods for copying, moving, removing, etc.
Module
Functions require 'fileutils' FileUtils.cd(dir, **options) FileUtils.cd(dir, **options) {|dir| block } FileUtils.pwd() FileUtils.mkdir(dir, **options) FileUtils.mkdir(list, **options) FileUtils.mkdir_p(dir, **options) FileUtils.mkdir_p(list, **options) FileUtils.rmdir(dir, **options) FileUtils.rmdir(list, **options) FileUtils.ln(target, link, **options) FileUtils.ln(targets, dir, **options) FileUtils.ln_s(target, link, **options) FileUtils.ln_s(targets, dir, **options) FileUtils.ln_sf(target, link, **options) FileUtils.cp(src, dest, **options) FileUtils.cp(list, dir, **options) FileUtils.cp_r(src, dest, **options) FileUtils.cp_r(list, dir, **options) FileUtils.mv(src, dest, **options) FileUtils.mv(list, dir, **options) FileUtils.rm(list, **options) FileUtils.rm_r(list, **options) FileUtils.rm_rf(list, **options) FileUtils.install(src, dest, **options) FileUtils.chmod(mode, list, **options) FileUtils.chmod_R(mode, list, **options) FileUtils.chown(user, group, list, **options) FileUtils.chown_R(user, group, list, **options) FileUtils.touch(list, **options)
Possible options
are:
:force
forced operation (rewrite files if exist, remove directories if not empty, etc.);
:verbose
print command to be run, in bash syntax, before performing it;
:preserve
preserve object’s group, user and modification time on copying;
:noop
no changes are made (usable in combination with :verbose
which will print the command to run)
Each method documents the options that it honours. See also ::commands
, ::options
and ::options_of
methods to introspect which command have which options.
All methods that have the concept of a “source” file or directory can take either one file or a list of files in that argument. See the method documentation for examples.
There are some ‘low level’ methods, which do not accept keyword arguments:
FileUtils.copy_entry(src, dest, preserve = false, dereference_root = false, remove_destination = false) FileUtils.copy_file(src, dest, preserve = false, dereference = true) FileUtils.copy_stream(srcstream, deststream) FileUtils.remove_entry(path, force = false) FileUtils.remove_entry_secure(path, force = false) FileUtils.remove_file(path, force = false) FileUtils.compare_file(path_a, path_b) FileUtils.compare_stream(stream_a, stream_b) FileUtils.uptodate?(file, cmp_list)
FileUtils::Verbose
This module has all methods of FileUtils
module, but it outputs messages before acting. This equates to passing the :verbose
flag to methods in FileUtils
.
FileUtils::NoWrite
This module has all methods of FileUtils
module, but never changes files/directories. This equates to passing the :noop
flag to methods in FileUtils
.
FileUtils::DryRun
This module has all methods of FileUtils
module, but never changes files/directories. This equates to passing the :noop
and :verbose
flags to methods in FileUtils
.
The Singleton
module implements the Singleton
pattern.
To use Singleton
, include the module in your class.
class Klass include Singleton # ... end
This ensures that only one instance of Klass can be created.
a,b = Klass.instance, Klass.instance a == b # => true Klass.new # => NoMethodError - new is private ...
The instance is created at upon the first call of Klass.instance().
class OtherKlass include Singleton # ... end ObjectSpace.each_object(OtherKlass){} # => 0 OtherKlass.instance ObjectSpace.each_object(OtherKlass){} # => 1
This behavior is preserved under inheritance and cloning.
This above is achieved by:
Making Klass.new and Klass.allocate private.
Overriding Klass.inherited(sub_klass) and Klass.clone() to ensure that the Singleton
properties are kept when inherited and cloned.
Providing the Klass.instance() method that returns the same object each time it is called.
Overriding Klass._load(str) to call Klass.instance().
Overriding Klass#clone and Klass#dup to raise TypeErrors to prevent cloning or duping.
Singleton
and Marshal
By default Singleton’s _dump(depth)
returns the empty string. Marshalling by default will strip state information, e.g. instance variables from the instance. Classes using Singleton
can provide custom _load(str) and _dump(depth) methods to retain some of the previous state of the instance.
require 'singleton' class Example include Singleton attr_accessor :keep, :strip def _dump(depth) # this strips the @strip information from the instance Marshal.dump(@keep, depth) end def self._load(str) instance.keep = Marshal.load(str) instance end end a = Example.instance a.keep = "keep this" a.strip = "get rid of this" stored_state = Marshal.dump(a) a.keep = nil a.strip = nil b = Marshal.load(stored_state) p a == b # => true p a.keep # => "keep this" p a.strip # => nil
define UnicodeNormalize
module here so that we don’t have to look it up