A string representation of this Version
.
Extensions to build when installing the gem, specifically the paths to extconf.rb-style files used to compile extensions.
These files will be run when the gem is installed, causing the C (or whatever) code to be compiled on the user’s machine.
Usage:
spec.extensions << 'ext/rmagic/extconf.rb'
See Gem::Ext::Builder
for information about writing extensions for gems.
Activate this spec, registering it as a loaded spec and adding it’s lib paths to $LOAD_PATH. Returns true if the spec was activated, false if it was previously activated. Freaks out if there are conflicts upon activation.
Sets extensions to extensions
, ensuring it is an array.
Set
the version to version
, potentially also setting required_rubygems_version
if version
indicates it is a prerelease.
Parses uri, raising if it’s invalid
Parses uri, returning the original uri if it’s invalid
Returns the parser to be used.
Unless a URI::Parser
is defined, DEFAULT_PARSER is used.
Returns true if URI
does not have a scheme (e.g. http:// or https://) specified.
Returns extensions.
Setter for extensions val
.
uri
Parses uri
and constructs either matching URI
scheme object (File
, FTP
, HTTP
, HTTPS
, LDAP
, LDAPS
, or MailTo
) or URI::Generic
.
p = URI::Parser.new p.parse("ldap://ldap.example.com/dc=example?user=john") #=> #<URI::LDAP ldap://ldap.example.com/dc=example?user=john>
uri
Parses uri
and constructs either matching URI
scheme object (File
, FTP
, HTTP
, HTTPS
, LDAP
, LDAPS
, or MailTo
) or URI::Generic
.
p = URI::Parser.new p.parse("ldap://ldap.example.com/dc=example?user=john") #=> #<URI::LDAP ldap://ldap.example.com/dc=example?user=john>
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
.
Parses the given string into an abstract syntax tree, returning the root node of that tree.
SyntaxError
is raised if the given string is invalid syntax.
RubyVM::AbstractSyntaxTree.parse("x = 1 + 2") # => #<RubyVM::AbstractSyntaxTree::Node:SCOPE@1:0-1:9>
Creates a class to wrap the C union described by signature
.
MyUnion = union ['int i', 'char c']
Start streaming using encoding
Set
all the parameters.
Parses self
destructively and returns self
containing the rest arguments left unparsed.