Paths in the gem to add to $LOAD_PATH
when this gem is activated. If you have an extension you do not need to add "ext"
to the require path, the extension build process will copy the extension files into “lib” for you.
The default value is "lib"
Usage:
# If all library files are in the root directory... spec.require_paths = ['.']
Is name
a required attribute?
Required specification attributes
Singular accessor for require_paths
Singular accessor for require_paths
Checks if this specification meets the requirement of dependency
.
Does a sanity check on the specification.
Raises InvalidSpecificationException if the spec does not pass the checks.
Only runs checks that are considered necessary for the specification to be functional.
Opening characters like ‘{` need closing characters # like `}`.
When a mis-match count is detected, suggest the missing member.
For example if there are 3 ‘}` and only two `{` return `“{”`
Checks the scheme v
component against the URI::Parser
Regexp
for :SCHEME.
Returns the source encoding as an encoding object.
Note that the result may not be equal to the source encoding of the encoding converter if the conversion has multiple steps.
ec = Encoding::Converter.new("ISO-8859-1", "EUC-JP") # ISO-8859-1 -> UTF-8 -> EUC-JP begin ec.convert("\xa0") # NO-BREAK SPACE, which is available in UTF-8 but not in EUC-JP. rescue Encoding::UndefinedConversionError p $!.source_encoding #=> #<Encoding:UTF-8> p $!.destination_encoding #=> #<Encoding:EUC-JP> p $!.source_encoding_name #=> "UTF-8" p $!.destination_encoding_name #=> "EUC-JP" end
Returns the destination encoding as an encoding object.
Returns the source encoding as an encoding object.
Note that the result may not be equal to the source encoding of the encoding converter if the conversion has multiple steps.
ec = Encoding::Converter.new("ISO-8859-1", "EUC-JP") # ISO-8859-1 -> UTF-8 -> EUC-JP begin ec.convert("\xa0") # NO-BREAK SPACE, which is available in UTF-8 but not in EUC-JP. rescue Encoding::UndefinedConversionError p $!.source_encoding #=> #<Encoding:UTF-8> p $!.destination_encoding #=> #<Encoding:EUC-JP> p $!.source_encoding_name #=> "UTF-8" p $!.destination_encoding_name #=> "EUC-JP" end
Returns the destination encoding as an encoding object.
Returns the corresponding ASCII compatible encoding.
Returns nil if the argument is an ASCII compatible encoding.
“corresponding ASCII compatible encoding” is an ASCII compatible encoding which can represents exactly the same characters as the given ASCII incompatible encoding. So, no conversion undefined error occurs when converting between the two encodings.
Encoding::Converter.asciicompat_encoding("ISO-2022-JP") #=> #<Encoding:stateless-ISO-2022-JP> Encoding::Converter.asciicompat_encoding("UTF-16BE") #=> #<Encoding:UTF-8> Encoding::Converter.asciicompat_encoding("UTF-8") #=> nil
Returns the source encoding as an Encoding
object.
Returns the destination encoding as an Encoding
object.
Returns the length of the hash value of the digest.
This method should be overridden by each implementation subclass. If not, digest_obj.digest().length() is returned.
Generates a radio-button Input element.
name
is the name of the input field. value
is the value of the field if checked. checked
specifies whether the field starts off checked.
Alternatively, the attributes can be specified as a hash.
radio_button("name", "value") # <INPUT TYPE="radio" NAME="name" VALUE="value"> radio_button("name", "value", true) # <INPUT TYPE="radio" NAME="name" VALUE="value" CHECKED> radio_button("NAME" => "name", "VALUE" => "value", "ID" => "foo") # <INPUT TYPE="radio" NAME="name" VALUE="value" ID="foo">
Generate a sequence of radio button Input elements, as a String
.
This works the same as checkbox_group()
. However, it is not valid to have more than one radiobutton in a group checked.
radio_group("name", "foo", "bar", "baz") # <INPUT TYPE="radio" NAME="name" VALUE="foo">foo # <INPUT TYPE="radio" NAME="name" VALUE="bar">bar # <INPUT TYPE="radio" NAME="name" VALUE="baz">baz radio_group("name", ["foo"], ["bar", true], "baz") # <INPUT TYPE="radio" NAME="name" VALUE="foo">foo # <INPUT TYPE="radio" CHECKED NAME="name" VALUE="bar">bar # <INPUT TYPE="radio" NAME="name" VALUE="baz">baz radio_group("name", ["1", "Foo"], ["2", "Bar", true], "Baz") # <INPUT TYPE="radio" NAME="name" VALUE="1">Foo # <INPUT TYPE="radio" CHECKED NAME="name" VALUE="2">Bar # <INPUT TYPE="radio" NAME="name" VALUE="Baz">Baz radio_group("NAME" => "name", "VALUES" => ["foo", "bar", "baz"]) radio_group("NAME" => "name", "VALUES" => [["foo"], ["bar", true], "baz"]) radio_group("NAME" => "name", "VALUES" => [["1", "Foo"], ["2", "Bar", true], "Baz"])
returns a Time
that represents the Last-Modified field.
Returns a list of encodings in Content-Encoding field as an array of strings.
The encodings are downcased for canonicalization.
Returns a value representing the “cost” of transforming str1 into str2 Vendored version of DidYouMean::Levenshtein.distance from the ruby/did_you_mean gem @ 1.4.0 github.com/ruby/did_you_mean/blob/2ddf39b874808685965dbc47d344cf6c7651807c/lib/did_you_mean/levenshtein.rb#L7-L37