Returns the conjugate of self
, Complex.rect(self.imag, self.real)
:
Complex.rect(1, 2).conj # => (1-2i)
Returns self
truncated (toward zero) to a precision of digits
decimal digits.
Numeric implements this by converting self
to a Float
and invoking Float#truncate
.
Returns true
if self
is less than 0, false
otherwise.
Returns zero.
Returns self
.
Extracts data from self
, forming objects that become the elements of a new array; returns that array. See Packed Data.
Like String#unpack
, but unpacks and returns only the first extracted object. See Packed Data.
Returns the count of characters (not bytes) in self
:
'foo'.length # => 3 'тест'.length # => 4 'こんにちは'.length # => 5
Contrast with String#bytesize
:
'foo'.bytesize # => 3 'тест'.bytesize # => 8 'こんにちは'.bytesize # => 15
Returns a MatchData
object (or nil
) based on self
and the given pattern
.
Note: also updates Global Variables at Regexp
.
Computes regexp
by converting pattern
(if not already a Regexp
).
regexp = Regexp.new(pattern)
Computes matchdata
, which will be either a MatchData
object or nil
(see Regexp#match
):
matchdata = <tt>regexp.match(self)
With no block given, returns the computed matchdata
:
'foo'.match('f') # => #<MatchData "f"> 'foo'.match('o') # => #<MatchData "o"> 'foo'.match('x') # => nil
If Integer
argument offset
is given, the search begins at index offset
:
'foo'.match('f', 1) # => nil 'foo'.match('o', 1) # => #<MatchData "o">
With a block given, calls the block with the computed matchdata
and returns the block’s return value:
'foo'.match(/o/) {|matchdata| matchdata } # => #<MatchData "o"> 'foo'.match(/x/) {|matchdata| matchdata } # => nil 'foo'.match(/f/, 1) {|matchdata| matchdata } # => nil
Returns true
or false
based on whether a match is found for self
and pattern
.
Note: does not update Global Variables at Regexp
.
Computes regexp
by converting pattern
(if not already a Regexp
).
regexp = Regexp.new(pattern)
Returns true
if self+.match(regexp)
returns a MatchData
object, false
otherwise:
'foo'.match?(/o/) # => true 'foo'.match?('o') # => true 'foo'.match?(/x/) # => false
If Integer
argument offset
is given, the search begins at index offset
:
'foo'.match?('f', 1) # => false 'foo'.match?('o', 1) # => true
Concatenates each object in objects
to self
and returns self
:
s = 'foo' s.concat('bar', 'baz') # => "foobarbaz" s # => "foobarbaz"
For each given object object
that is an Integer
, the value is considered a codepoint and converted to a character before concatenation:
s = 'foo' s.concat(32, 'bar', 32, 'baz') # => "foo bar baz"
Related: String#<<
, which takes a single argument.
Returns a 3-element array of substrings of self
.
Matches a pattern against self
, scanning from the beginning. The pattern is:
string_or_regexp
itself, if it is a Regexp
.
Regexp.quote(string_or_regexp)
, if string_or_regexp
is a string.
If the pattern is matched, returns pre-match, first-match, post-match:
'hello'.partition('l') # => ["he", "l", "lo"] 'hello'.partition('ll') # => ["he", "ll", "o"] 'hello'.partition('h') # => ["", "h", "ello"] 'hello'.partition('o') # => ["hell", "o", ""] 'hello'.partition(/l+/) #=> ["he", "ll", "o"] 'hello'.partition('') # => ["", "", "hello"] 'тест'.partition('т') # => ["", "т", "ест"] 'こんにちは'.partition('に') # => ["こん", "に", "ちは"]
If the pattern is not matched, returns a copy of self
and two empty strings:
'hello'.partition('x') # => ["hello", "", ""]
Related: String#rpartition
, String#split
.
Returns a 3-element array of substrings of self
.
Matches a pattern against self
, scanning backwards from the end. The pattern is:
string_or_regexp
itself, if it is a Regexp
.
Regexp.quote(string_or_regexp)
, if string_or_regexp
is a string.
If the pattern is matched, returns pre-match, last-match, post-match:
'hello'.rpartition('l') # => ["hel", "l", "o"] 'hello'.rpartition('ll') # => ["he", "ll", "o"] 'hello'.rpartition('h') # => ["", "h", "ello"] 'hello'.rpartition('o') # => ["hell", "o", ""] 'hello'.rpartition(/l+/) # => ["hel", "l", "o"] 'hello'.rpartition('') # => ["hello", "", ""] 'тест'.rpartition('т') # => ["тес", "т", ""] 'こんにちは'.rpartition('に') # => ["こん", "に", "ちは"]
If the pattern is not matched, returns two empty strings and a copy of self
:
'hello'.rpartition('x') # => ["", "", "hello"]
Related: String#partition
, String#split
.
Returns self
truncated (toward zero) to a precision of ndigits
decimal digits.
When ndigits
is positive, returns a float with ndigits
digits after the decimal point (as available):
f = 12345.6789 f.truncate(1) # => 12345.6 f.truncate(3) # => 12345.678 f = -12345.6789 f.truncate(1) # => -12345.6 f.truncate(3) # => -12345.678
When ndigits
is negative, returns an integer with at least ndigits.abs
trailing zeros:
f = 12345.6789 f.truncate(0) # => 12345 f.truncate(-3) # => 12000 f = -12345.6789 f.truncate(0) # => -12345 f.truncate(-3) # => -12000
Note that the limited precision of floating-point arithmetic may lead to surprising results:
(0.3 / 0.1).truncate #=> 2 (!)
Related: Float#round
.
Returns true
if self
is a NaN, false
otherwise.
f = -1.0 #=> -1.0 f.nan? #=> false f = 0.0/0.0 #=> NaN f.nan? #=> true
Returns true
if self
is less than 0, false
otherwise.
Resumes the fiber from the point at which the last Fiber.yield
was called, or starts running it if it is the first call to resume
. Arguments passed to resume will be the value of the Fiber.yield
expression or will be passed as block parameters to the fiber’s block if this is the first resume
.
Alternatively, when resume is called it evaluates to the arguments passed to the next Fiber.yield
statement inside the fiber’s block or to the block value if it runs to completion without any Fiber.yield
Retruns the home directory path of the user specified with user_name
if it is not nil
, or the current login user:
Dir.home # => "/home/me" Dir.home('root') # => "/root"
Raises ArgumentError
if user_name
is not a user name.
Returns true if path
matches against pattern
. The pattern is not a regular expression; instead it follows rules similar to shell filename globbing. It may contain the following metacharacters:
*
Matches any file. Can be restricted by other values in the glob. Equivalent to /.*/x
in regexp.
*
Matches all regular files
c*
Matches all files beginning with c
*c
Matches all files ending with c
*c*
Matches all files that have c
in them (including at the beginning or end).
To match hidden files (that start with a .
) set the File::FNM_DOTMATCH flag.
**
Matches directories recursively or files expansively.
?
Matches any one character. Equivalent to /.{1}/
in regexp.
[set]
Matches any one character in set
. Behaves exactly like character sets in Regexp
, including set negation ([^a-z]
).
\
Escapes the next metacharacter.
{a,b}
Matches pattern a and pattern b if File::FNM_EXTGLOB flag is enabled. Behaves like a Regexp
union ((?:a|b)
).
flags
is a bitwise OR of the FNM_XXX
constants. The same glob pattern and flags are used by Dir::glob
.
Examples:
File.fnmatch('cat', 'cat') #=> true # match entire string File.fnmatch('cat', 'category') #=> false # only match partial string File.fnmatch('c{at,ub}s', 'cats') #=> false # { } isn't supported by default File.fnmatch('c{at,ub}s', 'cats', File::FNM_EXTGLOB) #=> true # { } is supported on FNM_EXTGLOB File.fnmatch('c?t', 'cat') #=> true # '?' match only 1 character File.fnmatch('c??t', 'cat') #=> false # ditto File.fnmatch('c*', 'cats') #=> true # '*' match 0 or more characters File.fnmatch('c*t', 'c/a/b/t') #=> true # ditto File.fnmatch('ca[a-z]', 'cat') #=> true # inclusive bracket expression File.fnmatch('ca[^t]', 'cat') #=> false # exclusive bracket expression ('^' or '!') File.fnmatch('cat', 'CAT') #=> false # case sensitive File.fnmatch('cat', 'CAT', File::FNM_CASEFOLD) #=> true # case insensitive File.fnmatch('cat', 'CAT', File::FNM_SYSCASE) #=> true or false # depends on the system default File.fnmatch('?', '/', File::FNM_PATHNAME) #=> false # wildcard doesn't match '/' on FNM_PATHNAME File.fnmatch('*', '/', File::FNM_PATHNAME) #=> false # ditto File.fnmatch('[/]', '/', File::FNM_PATHNAME) #=> false # ditto File.fnmatch('\?', '?') #=> true # escaped wildcard becomes ordinary File.fnmatch('\a', 'a') #=> true # escaped ordinary remains ordinary File.fnmatch('\a', '\a', File::FNM_NOESCAPE) #=> true # FNM_NOESCAPE makes '\' ordinary File.fnmatch('[\?]', '?') #=> true # can escape inside bracket expression File.fnmatch('*', '.profile') #=> false # wildcard doesn't match leading File.fnmatch('*', '.profile', File::FNM_DOTMATCH) #=> true # period by default. File.fnmatch('.*', '.profile') #=> true File.fnmatch('**/*.rb', 'main.rb') #=> false File.fnmatch('**/*.rb', './main.rb') #=> false File.fnmatch('**/*.rb', 'lib/song.rb') #=> true File.fnmatch('**.rb', 'main.rb') #=> true File.fnmatch('**.rb', './main.rb') #=> false File.fnmatch('**.rb', 'lib/song.rb') #=> true File.fnmatch('*', 'dave/.profile') #=> true File.fnmatch('**/foo', 'a/b/c/foo', File::FNM_PATHNAME) #=> true File.fnmatch('**/foo', '/a/b/c/foo', File::FNM_PATHNAME) #=> true File.fnmatch('**/foo', 'c:/a/b/c/foo', File::FNM_PATHNAME) #=> true File.fnmatch('**/foo', 'a/.b/c/foo', File::FNM_PATHNAME) #=> false File.fnmatch('**/foo', 'a/.b/c/foo', File::FNM_PATHNAME | File::FNM_DOTMATCH) #=> true
Returns a File::Stat
object for the file at filepath
(see File::Stat
):
File.stat('t.txt').class # => File::Stat
Like File::stat
, but does not follow the last symbolic link; instead, returns a File::Stat
object for the link itself.
File.symlink('t.txt', 'symlink') File.stat('symlink').size # => 47 File.lstat('symlink').size # => 5
Returns the modification time for the named file as a Time
object.
file_name can be an IO
object.
File.mtime("testfile") #=> Tue Apr 08 12:58:04 CDT 2003
Returns the change time for the named file (the time at which directory information about the file was changed, not the file itself).
file_name can be an IO
object.
Note that on Windows (NTFS), returns creation time (birth time).
File.ctime("testfile") #=> Wed Apr 09 08:53:13 CDT 2003
Sets the access and modification times of each named file to the first two arguments. If a file is a symlink, this method acts upon its referent rather than the link itself; for the inverse behavior see File.lutime
. Returns the number of file names in the argument list.