Converts this AvailableSet
into a RequestSet that can be used to install gems.
If development
is :none then no development dependencies are installed. Other options are :shallow for only direct development dependencies of the gems in this set or :all for all development dependencies.
Dispatch enter and leave events for NumberedReferenceReadNode
nodes and continue walking the tree.
Shows surrounding kw/end pairs
The purpose of showing these extra pairs is due to cases of ambiguity when only one visible line is matched.
For example:
1 class Dog 2 def bark 4 def eat 5 end 6 end
In this case either line 2 could be missing an ‘end` or line 4 was an extra line added by mistake (it happens).
When we detect the above problem it shows the issue as only being on line 2
2 def bark
Showing “neighbor” keyword pairs gives extra context:
2 def bark 4 def eat 5 end
Corrects path
(usually returned by ‘URI.parse().path` on Windows), that comes with a leading slash.
Extract platform given on the command line
Removes the named instance variable from obj, returning that variable’s value. String
arguments are converted to symbols.
class Dummy attr_reader :var def initialize @var = 99 end def remove remove_instance_variable(:@var) end end d = Dummy.new d.var #=> 99 d.remove #=> 99 d.var #=> nil
DO NOT USE THIS DIRECTLY.
Hook method to return whether the obj can respond to id method or not.
When the method name parameter is given as a string, the string is converted to a symbol.
See respond_to?
, and the example of BasicObject
.
Returns local IP addresses as an array.
The array contains Addrinfo
objects.
pp Socket.ip_address_list #=> [#<Addrinfo: 127.0.0.1>, #<Addrinfo: 192.168.0.128>, #<Addrinfo: ::1>, ...]
Returns reference counter of Dispatch interface of WIN32OLE
object. You should not use this method because this method exists only for debugging WIN32OLE
.
Returns true when OLE object has OLE method, otherwise returns false.
ie = WIN32OLE.new('InternetExplorer.Application') ie.ole_respond_to?("gohome") => true
Invoked as a callback whenever a singleton method is removed from the receiver.
module Chatty def Chatty.singleton_method_removed(id) puts "Removing #{id.id2name}" end def self.one() end def two() end def Chatty.three() end class << self remove_method :three remove_method :one end end
produces:
Removing three Removing one
Checks for a method provided by this the delegate object by forwarding the call through _getobj_.
Handle BasicObject
instances
Returns the status of the global “report on exception” condition.
The default is true
since Ruby 2.5.
All threads created when this flag is true will report a message on $stderr if an exception kills the thread.
Thread.new { 1.times { raise } }
will produce this output on $stderr:
#<Thread:...> terminated with exception (report_on_exception is true): Traceback (most recent call last): 2: from -e:1:in `block in <main>' 1: from -e:1:in `times'
This is done to catch errors in threads early. In some cases, you might not want this output. There are multiple ways to avoid the extra output:
If the exception is not intended, the best is to fix the cause of the exception so it does not happen anymore.
If the exception is intended, it might be better to rescue it closer to where it is raised rather then let it kill the Thread
.
If it is guaranteed the Thread
will be joined with Thread#join
or Thread#value
, then it is safe to disable this report with Thread.current.report_on_exception = false
when starting the Thread
. However, this might handle the exception much later, or not at all if the Thread
is never joined due to the parent thread being blocked, etc.
See also ::report_on_exception=
.
There is also an instance level method to set this for a specific thread, see report_on_exception=
.