Results for: "Psych"

Represents a symbol literal that contains interpolation.

:"foo #{bar} baz"
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

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

if /foo/i then end
   ^^^^^^

Represents the use of the modifier ‘in` operator.

foo in bar
^^^^^^^^^^

Represents the use of the ‘=>` operator.

foo => bar
^^^^^^^^^^

Represents writing local variables using a regular expression match with named capture groups.

/(?<foo>bar)/ =~ baz
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

Represents a symbol literal or a symbol contained within a ‘%i` list.

:foo
^^^^

%i[foo]
   ^^^

Generated when trying to lookup a gem to indicate that the gem was found, but that it isn’t usable on the current platform.

fetch and install read these and report them to the user to aid in figuring out why a gem couldn’t be installed.

An error that indicates we weren’t able to fetch some data from a source

Raised when a gem dependencies file specifies a ruby version that does not match the current version.

Raised to indicate that a system exit should occur with the specified exit_code

No documentation available

RemoteFetcher handles the details of fetching gems and gem information from a remote source.

SpecFetcher handles metadata updates from remote gem repositories.

No documentation available

Searches code for a syntax error

There are three main phases in the algorithm:

  1. Sanitize/format input source

  2. Search for invalid blocks

  3. Format invalid blocks into something meaninful

This class handles the part.

The bulk of the heavy lifting is done in:

- CodeFrontier (Holds information for generating blocks and determining if we can stop searching)
- ParseBlocksFromLine (Creates blocks into the frontier)
- BlockExpand (Expands existing blocks to search more code)

## Syntax error detection

When the frontier holds the syntax error, we can stop searching

search = CodeSearch.new(<<~EOM)
  def dog
    def lol
  end
EOM

search.call

search.invalid_blocks.map(&:to_s) # =>
# => ["def lol\n"]

Outputs code with highlighted lines

Whatever is passed to this class will be rendered even if it is “marked invisible” any filtering of output should be done before calling this class.

DisplayCodeWithLineNumbers.new(
  lines: lines,
  highlight_lines: [lines[2], lines[3]]
).call
# =>
    1
    2  def cat
  > 3    Dir.chdir
  > 4    end
    5  end
    6

Explains syntax errors based on their source

example:

source = "def foo; puts 'lol'" # Note missing end
explain ExplainSyntax.new(
  code_lines: CodeLine.from_source(source)
).call
explain.errors.first
# => "Unmatched keyword, missing `end' ?"

When the error cannot be determined by lexical counting then the parser is run against the input and the raw errors are returned.

Example:

source = "1 * " # Note missing a second number
explain ExplainSyntax.new(
  code_lines: CodeLine.from_source(source)
).call
explain.errors.first
# => "syntax error, unexpected end-of-input"
No documentation available

The default port for HTTPS URIs is 443, and the scheme is ‘https:’ rather than ‘http:’. Other than that, HTTPS URIs are identical to HTTP URIs; see URI::HTTP.

The default port for LDAPS URIs is 636, and the scheme is ‘ldaps:’ rather than ‘ldap:’. Other than that, LDAPS URIs are identical to LDAP URIs; see URI::LDAP.

This is not an existing class, but documentation of the interface that Scheduler object should comply to in order to be used as argument to Fiber.scheduler and handle non-blocking fibers. See also the “Non-blocking fibers” section in Fiber class docs for explanations of some concepts.

Scheduler’s behavior and usage are expected to be as follows:

This way concurrent execution will be achieved transparently for every individual Fiber’s code.

Scheduler implementations are provided by gems, like Async.

Hook methods are:

When not specified otherwise, the hook implementations are mandatory: if they are not implemented, the methods trying to call hook will fail. To provide backward compatibility, in the future hooks will be optional (if they are not implemented, due to the scheduler being created for the older Ruby version, the code which needs this hook will not fail, and will just behave in a blocking fashion).

It is also strongly recommended that the scheduler implements the fiber method, which is delegated to by Fiber.schedule.

Sample toy implementation of the scheduler can be found in Ruby’s code, in test/fiber/scheduler.rb

AbstractSyntaxTree provides methods to parse Ruby code into abstract syntax trees. The nodes in the tree are instances of RubyVM::AbstractSyntaxTree::Node.

This module is MRI specific as it exposes implementation details of the MRI abstract syntax tree.

This module is experimental and its API is not stable, therefore it might change without notice. As examples, the order of children nodes is not guaranteed, the number of children nodes might change, there is no way to access children nodes by name, etc.

If you are looking for a stable API or an API working under multiple Ruby implementations, consider using the parser gem or Ripper. If you would like to make RubyVM::AbstractSyntaxTree stable, please join the discussion at bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/14844.

No documentation available

Flags for symbol nodes.

No documentation available
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