Results for: "remove_const"

Returns internal information of TracePoint.

The contents of the returned value are implementation specific. It may be changed in future.

This method is only for debugging TracePoint itself.

Returns x+i*y;

Complex(1, 2)    #=> (1+2i)
Complex('1+2i')  #=> (1+2i)
Complex(nil)     #=> TypeError
Complex(1, nil)  #=> TypeError

Complex(1, nil, exception: false)  #=> nil
Complex('1+2', exception: false)   #=> nil

Syntax of string form:

string form = extra spaces , complex , extra spaces ;
complex = real part | [ sign ] , imaginary part
        | real part , sign , imaginary part
        | rational , "@" , rational ;
real part = rational ;
imaginary part = imaginary unit | unsigned rational , imaginary unit ;
rational = [ sign ] , unsigned rational ;
unsigned rational = numerator | numerator , "/" , denominator ;
numerator = integer part | fractional part | integer part , fractional part ;
denominator = digits ;
integer part = digits ;
fractional part = "." , digits , [ ( "e" | "E" ) , [ sign ] , digits ] ;
imaginary unit = "i" | "I" | "j" | "J" ;
sign = "-" | "+" ;
digits = digit , { digit | "_" , digit };
digit = "0" | "1" | "2" | "3" | "4" | "5" | "6" | "7" | "8" | "9" ;
extra spaces = ? \s* ? ;

See String#to_c.

If object is string-like, parse the string and return the parsed result as a Ruby data structure. Otherwise, generate a JSON text from the Ruby data structure object and return it.

The opts argument is passed through to generate/parse respectively. See generate and parse for their documentation.

Uses the character cmd to perform various tests on file1 (first table below) or on file1 and file2 (second table).

File tests on a single file:

Cmd    Returns   Meaning
"A"  | Time    | Last access time for file1
"b"  | boolean | True if file1 is a block device
"c"  | boolean | True if file1 is a character device
"C"  | Time    | Last change time for file1
"d"  | boolean | True if file1 exists and is a directory
"e"  | boolean | True if file1 exists
"f"  | boolean | True if file1 exists and is a regular file
"g"  | boolean | True if file1 has the \CF{setgid} bit
     |         | set (false under NT)
"G"  | boolean | True if file1 exists and has a group
     |         | ownership equal to the caller's group
"k"  | boolean | True if file1 exists and has the sticky bit set
"l"  | boolean | True if file1 exists and is a symbolic link
"M"  | Time    | Last modification time for file1
"o"  | boolean | True if file1 exists and is owned by
     |         | the caller's effective uid
"O"  | boolean | True if file1 exists and is owned by
     |         | the caller's real uid
"p"  | boolean | True if file1 exists and is a fifo
"r"  | boolean | True if file1 is readable by the effective
     |         | uid/gid of the caller
"R"  | boolean | True if file is readable by the real
     |         | uid/gid of the caller
"s"  | int/nil | If file1 has nonzero size, return the size,
     |         | otherwise return nil
"S"  | boolean | True if file1 exists and is a socket
"u"  | boolean | True if file1 has the setuid bit set
"w"  | boolean | True if file1 exists and is writable by
     |         | the effective uid/gid
"W"  | boolean | True if file1 exists and is writable by
     |         | the real uid/gid
"x"  | boolean | True if file1 exists and is executable by
     |         | the effective uid/gid
"X"  | boolean | True if file1 exists and is executable by
     |         | the real uid/gid
"z"  | boolean | True if file1 exists and has a zero length

Tests that take two files:

"-"  | boolean | True if file1 and file2 are identical
"="  | boolean | True if the modification times of file1
     |         | and file2 are equal
"<"  | boolean | True if the modification time of file1
     |         | is prior to that of file2
">"  | boolean | True if the modification time of file1
     |         | is after that of file2

Produces a shallow copy of obj—the instance variables of obj are copied, but not the objects they reference. clone copies the frozen value state of obj, unless the :freeze keyword argument is given with a false or true value. See also the discussion under Object#dup.

class Klass
   attr_accessor :str
end
s1 = Klass.new      #=> #<Klass:0x401b3a38>
s1.str = "Hello"    #=> "Hello"
s2 = s1.clone       #=> #<Klass:0x401b3998 @str="Hello">
s2.str[1,4] = "i"   #=> "i"
s1.inspect          #=> "#<Klass:0x401b3a38 @str=\"Hi\">"
s2.inspect          #=> "#<Klass:0x401b3998 @str=\"Hi\">"

This method may have class-specific behavior. If so, that behavior will be documented under the #initialize_copy method of the class.

Returns arg as a String.

First tries to call its to_str method, then its to_s method.

String(self)        #=> "main"
String(self.class)  #=> "Object"
String(123456)      #=> "123456"

Returns x/y or arg as a Rational.

Rational(2, 3)   #=> (2/3)
Rational(5)      #=> (5/1)
Rational(0.5)    #=> (1/2)
Rational(0.3)    #=> (5404319552844595/18014398509481984)

Rational("2/3")  #=> (2/3)
Rational("0.3")  #=> (3/10)

Rational("10 cents")  #=> ArgumentError
Rational(nil)         #=> TypeError
Rational(1, nil)      #=> TypeError

Rational("10 cents", exception: false)  #=> nil

Syntax of the string form:

string form = extra spaces , rational , extra spaces ;
rational = [ sign ] , unsigned rational ;
unsigned rational = numerator | numerator , "/" , denominator ;
numerator = integer part | fractional part | integer part , fractional part ;
denominator = digits ;
integer part = digits ;
fractional part = "." , digits , [ ( "e" | "E" ) , [ sign ] , digits ] ;
sign = "-" | "+" ;
digits = digit , { digit | "_" , digit } ;
digit = "0" | "1" | "2" | "3" | "4" | "5" | "6" | "7" | "8" | "9" ;
extra spaces = ? \s* ? ;

See also String#to_r.

Returns the count of elements, based on an argument or block criterion, if given.

With no argument and no block given, returns the number of elements:

[0, 1, 2].count                # => 3
{foo: 0, bar: 1, baz: 2}.count # => 3

With argument object given, returns the number of elements that are == to object:

[0, 1, 2, 1].count(1)           # => 2

With a block given, calls the block with each element and returns the number of elements for which the block returns a truthy value:

[0, 1, 2, 3].count {|element| element < 2}              # => 2
{foo: 0, bar: 1, baz: 2}.count {|key, value| value < 2} # => 2

Returns an array of objects returned by the block.

With a block given, calls the block with successive elements; returns an array of the objects returned by the block:

(0..4).map {|i| i*i }                               # => [0, 1, 4, 9, 16]
{foo: 0, bar: 1, baz: 2}.map {|key, value| value*2} # => [0, 2, 4]

With no block given, returns an Enumerator.

With a block given, returns an array of two arrays:

Examples:

p = (1..4).partition {|i| i.even? }
p # => [[2, 4], [1, 3]]
p = ('a'..'d').partition {|c| c < 'c' }
p # => [["a", "b"], ["c", "d"]]
h = {foo: 0, bar: 1, baz: 2, bat: 3}
p = h.partition {|key, value| key.start_with?('b') }
p # => [[[:bar, 1], [:baz, 2], [:bat, 3]], [[:foo, 0]]]
p = h.partition {|key, value| value < 2 }
p # => [[[:foo, 0], [:bar, 1]], [[:baz, 2], [:bat, 3]]]

With no block given, returns an Enumerator.

Related: Enumerable#group_by.

Returns the first element or elements.

With no argument, returns the first element, or nil if there is none:

(1..4).first                   # => 1
%w[a b c].first                # => "a"
{foo: 1, bar: 1, baz: 2}.first # => [:foo, 1]
[].first                       # => nil

With integer argument n, returns an array containing the first n elements that exist:

(1..4).first(2)                   # => [1, 2]
%w[a b c d].first(3)              # => ["a", "b", "c"]
%w[a b c d].first(50)             # => ["a", "b", "c", "d"]
{foo: 1, bar: 1, baz: 2}.first(2) # => [[:foo, 1], [:bar, 1]]
[].first(2)                       # => []

Returns whether exactly one element meets a given criterion.

With no argument and no block, returns whether exactly one element is truthy:

(1..1).one?           # => true
[1, nil, false].one?  # => true
(1..4).one?           # => false
{foo: 0}.one?         # => true
{foo: 0, bar: 1}.one? # => false
[].one?               # => false

With argument pattern and no block, returns whether for exactly one element element, pattern === element:

[nil, false, 0].one?(Integer)        # => true
[nil, false, 0].one?(Numeric)        # => true
[nil, false, 0].one?(Float)          # => false
%w[bar baz bat bam].one?(/m/)        # => true
%w[bar baz bat bam].one?(/foo/)      # => false
%w[bar baz bat bam].one?('ba')       # => false
{foo: 0, bar: 1, baz: 2}.one?(Array) # => false
{foo: 0}.one?(Array)                 # => true
[].one?(Integer)                     # => false

With a block given, returns whether the block returns a truthy value for exactly one element:

(1..4).one? {|element| element < 2 }                     # => true
(1..4).one? {|element| element < 1 }                     # => false
{foo: 0, bar: 1, baz: 2}.one? {|key, value| value < 1 }  # => true
{foo: 0, bar: 1, baz: 2}.one? {|key, value| value < 2 } # => false

Related: none?, all?, any?.

Returns whether no element meets a given criterion.

With no argument and no block, returns whether no element is truthy:

(1..4).none?           # => false
[nil, false].none?     # => true
{foo: 0}.none?         # => false
{foo: 0, bar: 1}.none? # => false
[].none?               # => true

With argument pattern and no block, returns whether for no element element, pattern === element:

[nil, false, 1.1].none?(Integer)      # => true
%w[bar baz bat bam].none?(/m/)        # => false
%w[bar baz bat bam].none?(/foo/)      # => true
%w[bar baz bat bam].none?('ba')       # => true
{foo: 0, bar: 1, baz: 2}.none?(Hash)  # => true
{foo: 0}.none?(Array)                 # => false
[].none?(Integer)                     # => true

With a block given, returns whether the block returns a truthy value for no element:

(1..4).none? {|element| element < 1 }                     # => true
(1..4).none? {|element| element < 2 }                     # => false
{foo: 0, bar: 1, baz: 2}.none? {|key, value| value < 0 }  # => true
{foo: 0, bar: 1, baz: 2}.none? {|key, value| value < 1 } # => false

Related: one?, all?, any?.

Returns an array of all non-nil elements:

a = [nil, 0, nil, 'a', false, nil, false, nil, 'a', nil, 0, nil]
a.compact # => [0, "a", false, false, "a", 0]

Computes the cosine of decimal to the specified number of digits of precision, numeric.

If decimal is Infinity or NaN, returns NaN.

BigMath.cos(BigMath.PI(4), 16).to_s
#=> "-0.999999999999999999999999999999856613163740061349e0"

Computes the Jacobian of f at x. fx is the value of f at x.

Performs LU decomposition of the n by n matrix a.

Enables the coverage measurement. See the documentation of Coverage class in detail. This is equivalent to Coverage.setup and Coverage.resume.

Returns the state of the coverage measurement.

Generates a hex-encoded version of a given string.

Returns system temporary directory; typically “/tmp”.

No documentation available

Returns a Digest subclass by name

require 'openssl'

OpenSSL::Digest("MD5")
# => OpenSSL::Digest::MD5

Digest("Foo")
# => NameError: wrong constant name Foo

Returns a Digest subclass by name

require 'openssl'

OpenSSL::Digest("MD5")
# => OpenSSL::Digest::MD5

Digest("Foo")
# => NameError: wrong constant name Foo

Returns an inspect() string summarizing the object state.

Search took: 4ms  ·  Total Results: 3470