Returns an array of flattened objects returned by the block.
With a block given, calls the block with successive elements; returns a flattened array of objects returned by the block:
[0, 1, 2, 3].flat_map {|element| -element } # => [0, -1, -2, -3] [0, 1, 2, 3].flat_map {|element| [element, -element] } # => [0, 0, 1, -1, 2, -2, 3, -3] [[0, 1], [2, 3]].flat_map {|e| e + [100] } # => [0, 1, 100, 2, 3, 100] {foo: 0, bar: 1, baz: 2}.flat_map {|key, value| [key, value] } # => [:foo, 0, :bar, 1, :baz, 2]
With no block given, returns an Enumerator.
Alias: collect_concat
.
Returns an array of flattened objects returned by the block.
With a block given, calls the block with successive elements; returns a flattened array of objects returned by the block:
[0, 1, 2, 3].flat_map {|element| -element } # => [0, -1, -2, -3] [0, 1, 2, 3].flat_map {|element| [element, -element] } # => [0, 0, 1, -1, 2, -2, 3, -3] [[0, 1], [2, 3]].flat_map {|e| e + [100] } # => [0, 1, 100, 2, 3, 100] {foo: 0, bar: 1, baz: 2}.flat_map {|key, value| [key, value] } # => [:foo, 0, :bar, 1, :baz, 2]
With no block given, returns an Enumerator.
Alias: collect_concat
.
Sets create identifier, which is used to decide if the json_create hook of a class should be called; initial value is json_class
:
JSON.create_id # => 'json_class'
Returns the current create identifier. See also JSON.create_id=
.
Arguments obj
and opts
here are the same as arguments obj
and opts
in JSON.generate
.
By default, generates JSON data without checking for circular references in obj
(option max_nesting
set to false
, disabled).
Raises an exception if obj
contains circular references:
a = []; b = []; a.push(b); b.push(a) # Raises SystemStackError (stack level too deep): JSON.fast_generate(a)
Arguments obj
and opts
here are the same as arguments obj
and opts
in JSON.generate
.
Default options are:
{ indent: ' ', # Two spaces space: ' ', # One space array_nl: "\n", # Newline object_nl: "\n" # Newline }
Example:
obj = {foo: [:bar, :baz], bat: {bam: 0, bad: 1}} json = JSON.pretty_generate(obj) puts json
Output:
{ "foo": [ "bar", "baz" ], "bat": { "bam": 0, "bad": 1 } }
Returns the source file origin from the given object
.
See ::trace_object_allocations
for more information and examples.
Returns the original line from source for from the given object
.
See ::trace_object_allocations
for more information and examples.
Return consuming memory size of obj in bytes.
Note that the return size is incomplete. You need to deal with this information as only a HINT. Especially, the size of T_DATA
may not be correct.
This method is only expected to work with C Ruby.
From Ruby 2.2, memsize_of
(obj) returns a memory size includes sizeof(RVALUE).
Adds aProc as a finalizer, to be called after obj was destroyed. The object ID of the obj will be passed as an argument to aProc. If aProc is a lambda or method, make sure it can be called with a single argument.
The return value is an array [0, aProc]
.
The two recommended patterns are to either create the finaliser proc in a non-instance method where it can safely capture the needed state, or to use a custom callable object that stores the needed state explicitly as instance variables.
class Foo def initialize(data_needed_for_finalization) ObjectSpace.define_finalizer(self, self.class.create_finalizer(data_needed_for_finalization)) end def self.create_finalizer(data_needed_for_finalization) proc { puts "finalizing #{data_needed_for_finalization}" } end end class Bar class Remover def initialize(data_needed_for_finalization) @data_needed_for_finalization = data_needed_for_finalization end def call(id) puts "finalizing #{@data_needed_for_finalization}" end end def initialize(data_needed_for_finalization) ObjectSpace.define_finalizer(self, Remover.new(data_needed_for_finalization)) end end
Note that if your finalizer references the object to be finalized it will never be run on GC
, although it will still be run at exit. You will get a warning if you capture the object to be finalized as the receiver of the finalizer.
class CapturesSelf def initialize(name) ObjectSpace.define_finalizer(self, proc { # this finalizer will only be run on exit puts "finalizing #{name}" }) end end
Also note that finalization can be unpredictable and is never guaranteed to be run except on exit.
Removes all finalizers for obj.
Constant time memory comparison. Inputs are hashed using SHA-256 to mask the length of the secret. Returns true
if the strings are identical, false
otherwise.
Parse a file at filename
. Returns the Psych::Nodes::Document
.
Raises a Psych::SyntaxError
when a YAML
syntax error is detected.
Dump a list of objects as separate documents to a document stream.
Example:
Psych.dump_stream("foo\n ", {}) # => "--- ! \"foo\\n \"\n--- {}\n"
Load multiple documents given in yaml
. Returns the parsed documents as a list. If a block is given, each document will be converted to Ruby and passed to the block during parsing
Example:
Psych.load_stream("--- foo\n...\n--- bar\n...") # => ['foo', 'bar'] list = [] Psych.load_stream("--- foo\n...\n--- bar\n...") do |ruby| list << ruby end list # => ['foo', 'bar']
Returns the version of libyaml being used
Returns the number of malloc() allocations.
Only available if ruby was built with CALC_EXACT_MALLOC_SIZE
.
Returns whether or not automatic compaction has been enabled.
Updates automatic compaction mode.
When enabled, the compactor will execute on every major collection.
Enabling compaction will degrade performance on major collections.
Return measured GC
total time in nano seconds.
Copies stream src
to dest
. src
must respond to read(n) and dest
must respond to write(str).
Copies stream src
to dest
. src
must respond to read(n) and dest
must respond to write(str).
Returns true if the contents of a file a
and a file b
are identical.
FileUtils.compare_file('somefile', 'somefile') #=> true FileUtils.compare_file('/dev/null', '/dev/urandom') #=> false
Returns true if the contents of a file a
and a file b
are identical.
FileUtils.compare_file('somefile', 'somefile') #=> true FileUtils.compare_file('/dev/null', '/dev/urandom') #=> false
Takes a hash as its argument. The key is a symbol or an array of symbols. These symbols correspond to method names, instance variable names, or constant names (see def_delegator
). The value is the accessor to which the methods will be delegated.