Returns a list of the public instance methods defined in mod. If the optional parameter is false
, the methods of any ancestors are not included.
Returns a list of the protected instance methods defined in mod. If the optional parameter is false
, the methods of any ancestors are not included.
Returns a list of the private instance methods defined in mod. If the optional parameter is false
, the methods of any ancestors are not included.
module Mod def method1() end private :method1 def method2() end end Mod.instance_methods #=> [:method2] Mod.private_instance_methods #=> [:method1]
Returns a list of the undefined instance methods defined in mod. The undefined methods of any ancestors are not included.
Similar to instance_method, searches public method only.
Raises PStore::Error
if the calling code is not in a PStore#transaction
or if the code is in a read-only PStore#transaction
.
Returns the status of the global “abort on exception” condition.
The default is false
.
When set to true
, if any thread is aborted by an exception, the raised exception will be re-raised in the main thread.
Can also be specified by the global $DEBUG flag or command line option -d
.
See also ::abort_on_exception=
.
There is also an instance level method to set this for a specific thread, see abort_on_exception
.
When set to true
, if any thread is aborted by an exception, the raised exception will be re-raised in the main thread. Returns the new state.
Thread.abort_on_exception = true t1 = Thread.new do puts "In new thread" raise "Exception from thread" end sleep(1) puts "not reached"
This will produce:
In new thread prog.rb:4: Exception from thread (RuntimeError) from prog.rb:2:in `initialize' from prog.rb:2:in `new' from prog.rb:2
See also ::abort_on_exception
.
There is also an instance level method to set this for a specific thread, see abort_on_exception=
.
Returns the status of the thread-local “abort on exception” condition for this thr
.
The default is false
.
See also abort_on_exception=
.
There is also a class level method to set this for all threads, see ::abort_on_exception
.
When set to true
, if this thr
is aborted by an exception, the raised exception will be re-raised in the main thread.
See also abort_on_exception
.
There is also a class level method to set this for all threads, see ::abort_on_exception=
.
Starts tracing object allocations from the ObjectSpace
extension module.
For example:
require 'objspace' class C include ObjectSpace def foo trace_object_allocations do obj = Object.new p "#{allocation_sourcefile(obj)}:#{allocation_sourceline(obj)}" end end end C.new.foo #=> "objtrace.rb:8"
This example has included the ObjectSpace
module to make it easier to read, but you can also use the ::trace_object_allocations
notation (recommended).
Note that this feature introduces a huge performance decrease and huge memory consumption.
Sets whether or not to ignore case on completion.
Returns true if completion ignores case. If no, returns false.
NOTE: Returns the same object that is specified by Readline.completion_case_fold=
method.
require "readline" Readline.completion_case_fold = "This is a String." p Readline.completion_case_fold # => "This is a String."
Specifies a character to be appended on completion. Nothing will be appended if an empty string (“”) or nil is specified.
For example:
require "readline" Readline.readline("> ", true) Readline.completion_append_character = " "
Result:
> Input "/var/li". > /var/li Press TAB key. > /var/lib Completes "b" and appends " ". So, you can continuously input "/usr". > /var/lib /usr
NOTE: Only one character can be specified. When “string” is specified, sets only “s” that is the first.
require "readline" Readline.completion_append_character = "string" p Readline.completion_append_character # => "s"
Raises NotImplementedError
if the using readline library does not support.
Returns a string containing a character to be appended on completion. The default is a space (“ ”).
Raises NotImplementedError
if the using readline library does not support.
When called during a completion (e.g. from within your completion_proc
), it will return a string containing the character used to quote the argument being completed, or nil if the argument is unquoted.
When called at other times, it will always return nil.
Note that Readline.completer_quote_characters
must be set, or this method will always return nil.
Returns information about object moved in the most recent GC compaction.
The returned hash has two keys :considered and :moved. The hash for :considered lists the number of objects that were considered for movement by the compactor, and the :moved hash lists the number of objects that were actually moved. Some objects can’t be moved (maybe they were pinned) so these numbers can be used to calculate compaction efficiency.
Shortcut for defining multiple delegator methods, but with no provision for using a different name. The following two code samples have the same effect:
def_delegators :@records, :size, :<<, :map def_delegator :@records, :size def_delegator :@records, :<< def_delegator :@records, :map
Define method
as delegator instance method with an optional alias name ali
. Method
calls to ali
will be delegated to accessor.method
. accessor
should be a method name, instance variable name, or constant name. Use the full path to the constant if providing the constant name. Returns the name of the method defined.
class MyQueue CONST = 1 extend Forwardable attr_reader :queue def initialize @queue = [] end def_delegator :@queue, :push, :mypush def_delegator 'MyQueue::CONST', :to_i end q = MyQueue.new q.mypush 42 q.queue #=> [42] q.push 23 #=> NoMethodError q.to_i #=> 1
Path to specification files of default gems.
Finds the user’s config file
Performs a Miller-Rabin probabilistic primality test for bn
.
Deprecated in version 3.0. Use prime?
instead.
checks
and trial_div
parameters no longer have any effect.