Represents a regular expression literal that contains interpolation that is being used in the predicate of a conditional to implicitly match against the last line read by an IO object.

if /foo #{bar} baz/ then end
   ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Attributes

attr_reader opening_loc: Location

Read

attr_reader parts: Array

attr_reader closing_loc: Location

Class Methods

def initialize: (flags: Integer, opening_loc: Location, parts: Array, closing_loc: Location, location: Location) -> void

Similar to type, this method returns a symbol that you can use for splitting on the type of the node without having to do a long === chain. Note that like type, it will still be slower than using == for a single class, but should be faster in a case statement or an array comparison.

def self.type: () -> Symbol

Instance Methods

def accept: (visitor: Visitor) -> void

def ascii_8bit?: () -> bool

def child_nodes: () -> Array[nil | Node]

def closing: () -> String

def comment_targets: () -> Array[Node | Location]

def copy: (**params) -> InterpolatedMatchLastLineNode

An alias for child_nodes

def deconstruct_keys: (keys: Array) -> Hash[Symbol, nil | Node | Array | String | Token | Array | Location]

def euc_jp?: () -> bool

def extended?: () -> bool

def forced_binary_encoding?: () -> bool

def forced_us_ascii_encoding?: () -> bool

def forced_utf8_encoding?: () -> bool

def ignore_case?: () -> bool

def inspect(inspector: NodeInspector) -> String

def multi_line?: () -> bool

def once?: () -> bool

def opening: () -> String

Sometimes you want to check an instance of a node against a list of classes to see what kind of behavior to perform. Usually this is done by calling ‘[cls1, cls2].include?(node.class)` or putting the node into a case statement and doing `case node; when cls1; when cls2; end`. Both of these approaches are relatively slow because of the constant lookups, method calls, and/or array allocations.

Instead, you can call type, which will return to you a symbol that you can use for comparison. This is faster than the other approaches because it uses a single integer comparison, but also because if you’re on CRuby you can take advantage of the fact that case statements with all symbol keys will use a jump table.

def type: () -> Symbol

def utf_8?: () -> bool

def windows_31j?: () -> bool