Dispatch enter and leave events for BlockLocalVariableNode
nodes and continue walking the tree.
Dispatch enter and leave events for GlobalVariableTargetNode
nodes and continue walking the tree.
Dispatch enter and leave events for LocalVariableTargetNode
nodes and continue walking the tree.
Dispatch enter and leave events for NumberedReferenceReadNode
nodes and continue walking the tree.
If object
is an Array object, returns object
.
Otherwise if object
responds to :to_ary
, calls object.to_ary
and returns the result.
Returns nil
if object
does not respond to :to_ary
Raises an exception unless object.to_ary
returns an Array object.
Iterates backwards over array elements.
When a block given, passes, in reverse order, each element to the block; returns self
:
a = [:foo, 'bar', 2] a.reverse_each {|element| puts "#{element.class} #{element}" }
Output:
Integer 2 String bar Symbol foo
Allows the array to be modified during iteration:
a = [:foo, 'bar', 2] a.reverse_each {|element| puts element; a.clear if element.to_s.start_with?('b') }
Output:
2 bar
When no block given, returns a new Enumerator:
a = [:foo, 'bar', 2] e = a.reverse_each e # => #<Enumerator: [:foo, "bar", 2]:reverse_each> a1 = e.each {|element| puts "#{element.class} #{element}" }
Output:
Integer 2 String bar Symbol foo
Related: each
, each_index
.
Calls the block with each repeated permutation of length n
of the elements of self
; each permutation is an Array; returns self
. The order of the permutations is indeterminate.
When a block and a positive Integer
argument n
are given, calls the block with each n
-tuple repeated permutation of the elements of self
. The number of permutations is self.size**n
.
n
= 1:
a = [0, 1, 2] a.repeated_permutation(1) {|permutation| p permutation }
Output:
[0] [1] [2]
n
= 2:
a.repeated_permutation(2) {|permutation| p permutation }
Output:
[0, 0] [0, 1] [0, 2] [1, 0] [1, 1] [1, 2] [2, 0] [2, 1] [2, 2]
If n
is zero, calls the block once with an empty Array.
If n
is negative, does not call the block:
a.repeated_permutation(-1) {|permutation| fail 'Cannot happen' }
Returns a new Enumerator
if no block given:
a = [0, 1, 2] a.repeated_permutation(2) # => #<Enumerator: [0, 1, 2]:permutation(2)>
Using Enumerators, it’s convenient to show the permutations and counts for some values of n
:
e = a.repeated_permutation(0) e.size # => 1 e.to_a # => [[]] e = a.repeated_permutation(1) e.size # => 3 e.to_a # => [[0], [1], [2]] e = a.repeated_permutation(2) e.size # => 9 e.to_a # => [[0, 0], [0, 1], [0, 2], [1, 0], [1, 1], [1, 2], [2, 0], [2, 1], [2, 2]]
If object
is an Integer object, returns object
.
Integer.try_convert(1) # => 1
Otherwise if object
responds to :to_int
, calls object.to_int
and returns the result.
Integer.try_convert(1.25) # => 1
Returns nil
if object
does not respond to :to_int
Integer.try_convert([]) # => nil
Raises an exception unless object.to_int
returns an Integer object.
If object
is a String object, returns object
.
Otherwise if object
responds to :to_str
, calls object.to_str
and returns the result.
Returns nil
if object
does not respond to :to_str
.
Raises an exception unless object.to_str
returns a String object.
Returns an array of the grapheme clusters in self
(see Unicode Grapheme Cluster Boundaries):
s = "\u0061\u0308-pqr-\u0062\u0308-xyz-\u0063\u0308" # => "ä-pqr-b̈-xyz-c̈" s.grapheme_clusters # => ["ä", "-", "p", "q", "r", "-", "b̈", "-", "x", "y", "z", "-", "c̈"]
Returns the next-larger representable Float.
These examples show the internally stored values (64-bit hexadecimal) for each Float f
and for the corresponding f.next_float
:
f = 0.0 # 0x0000000000000000 f.next_float # 0x0000000000000001 f = 0.01 # 0x3f847ae147ae147b f.next_float # 0x3f847ae147ae147c
In the remaining examples here, the output is shown in the usual way (result to_s
):
0.01.next_float # => 0.010000000000000002 1.0.next_float # => 1.0000000000000002 100.0.next_float # => 100.00000000000001 f = 0.01 (0..3).each_with_index {|i| printf "%2d %-20a %s\n", i, f, f.to_s; f = f.next_float }
Output:
0 0x1.47ae147ae147bp-7 0.01 1 0x1.47ae147ae147cp-7 0.010000000000000002 2 0x1.47ae147ae147dp-7 0.010000000000000004 3 0x1.47ae147ae147ep-7 0.010000000000000005 f = 0.0; 100.times { f += 0.1 } f # => 9.99999999999998 # should be 10.0 in the ideal world. 10-f # => 1.9539925233402755e-14 # the floating point error. 10.0.next_float-10 # => 1.7763568394002505e-15 # 1 ulp (unit in the last place). (10-f)/(10.0.next_float-10) # => 11.0 # the error is 11 ulp. (10-f)/(10*Float::EPSILON) # => 8.8 # approximation of the above. "%a" % 10 # => "0x1.4p+3" "%a" % f # => "0x1.3fffffffffff5p+3" # the last hex digit is 5. 16 - 5 = 11 ulp.
Related: Float#prev_float
Returns the next-smaller representable Float.
These examples show the internally stored values (64-bit hexadecimal) for each Float f
and for the corresponding f.pev_float
:
f = 5e-324 # 0x0000000000000001 f.prev_float # 0x0000000000000000 f = 0.01 # 0x3f847ae147ae147b f.prev_float # 0x3f847ae147ae147a
In the remaining examples here, the output is shown in the usual way (result to_s
):
0.01.prev_float # => 0.009999999999999998 1.0.prev_float # => 0.9999999999999999 100.0.prev_float # => 99.99999999999999 f = 0.01 (0..3).each_with_index {|i| printf "%2d %-20a %s\n", i, f, f.to_s; f = f.prev_float }
Output:
0 0x1.47ae147ae147bp-7 0.01 1 0x1.47ae147ae147ap-7 0.009999999999999998 2 0x1.47ae147ae1479p-7 0.009999999999999997 3 0x1.47ae147ae1478p-7 0.009999999999999995
Related: Float#next_float
.
Like backtrace
, but returns each line of the execution stack as a Thread::Backtrace::Location
. Accepts the same arguments as backtrace
.
f = Fiber.new { Fiber.yield } f.resume loc = f.backtrace_locations.first loc.label #=> "yield" loc.path #=> "test.rb" loc.lineno #=> 1
Sets the Fiber
scheduler for the current thread. If the scheduler is set, non-blocking fibers (created by Fiber.new
with blocking: false
, or by Fiber.schedule
) call that scheduler’s hook methods on potentially blocking operations, and the current thread will call scheduler’s close
method on finalization (allowing the scheduler to properly manage all non-finished fibers).
scheduler
can be an object of any class corresponding to Fiber::Scheduler
. Its implementation is up to the user.
See also the “Non-blocking fibers” section in class docs.
Returns the Fiber
scheduler, that was last set for the current thread with Fiber.set_scheduler
if and only if the current fiber is non-blocking.
Returns default external encoding.
The default external encoding is used by default for strings created from the following locations:
File
data read from disk
SDBM
While strings created from these locations will have this encoding, the encoding may not be valid. Be sure to check String#valid_encoding?
.
File
data written to disk will be transcoded to the default external encoding when written, if default_internal
is not nil.
The default external encoding is initialized by the -E option. If -E isn’t set, it is initialized to UTF-8 on Windows and the locale on other operating systems.