Sets current codepage. The WIN32OLE.codepage
is initialized according to Encoding.default_internal
. If Encoding.default_internal
is nil then WIN32OLE.codepage
is initialized according to Encoding.default_external
.
WIN32OLE.codepage = WIN32OLE::CP_UTF8 WIN32OLE.codepage = 65001
Returns current locale id (lcid). The default locale is WIN32OLE::LOCALE_SYSTEM_DEFAULT
.
lcid = WIN32OLE.locale
Sets current locale id (lcid).
WIN32OLE.locale = 1033 # set locale English(U.S) obj = WIN32OLE::Variant.new("$100,000", WIN32OLE::VARIANT::VT_CY)
Runs the early binding method to set property. The 1st argument specifies dispatch ID, the 2nd argument specifies the array of arguments, the 3rd argument specifies the array of the type of arguments.
excel = WIN32OLE.new('Excel.Application') excel._setproperty(558, [true], [WIN32OLE::VARIANT::VT_BOOL]) # same effect as excel.visible = true
Sets property of OLE object. When you want to set property with argument, you can use this method.
excel = WIN32OLE.new('Excel.Application') excel.Visible = true book = excel.workbooks.add sheet = book.worksheets(1) sheet.setproperty('Cells', 1, 2, 10) # => The B1 cell value is 10.
Returns a new Hash
object whose entries are those for which the block returns a truthy value:
h = {foo: 0, bar: 1, baz: 2} h.select {|key, value| value < 2 } # => {:foo=>0, :bar=>1}
Returns a new Enumerator
if no block given:
h = {foo: 0, bar: 1, baz: 2} e = h.select # => #<Enumerator: {:foo=>0, :bar=>1, :baz=>2}:select> e.each {|key, value| value < 2 } # => {:foo=>0, :bar=>1}
Returns self
, whose entries are those for which the block returns a truthy value:
h = {foo: 0, bar: 1, baz: 2} h.select! {|key, value| value < 2 } => {:foo=>0, :bar=>1}
Returns nil
if no entries were removed.
Returns a new Enumerator
if no block given:
h = {foo: 0, bar: 1, baz: 2} e = h.select! # => #<Enumerator: {:foo=>0, :bar=>1, :baz=>2}:select!> e.each { |key, value| value < 2 } # => {:foo=>0, :bar=>1}
Returns a new Hash
object with the each key-value pair inverted:
h = {foo: 0, bar: 1, baz: 2} h1 = h.invert h1 # => {0=>:foo, 1=>:bar, 2=>:baz}
Overwrites any repeated new keys: (see Entry Order):
h = {foo: 0, bar: 0, baz: 0} h.invert # => {0=>:baz}
Returns true
if key
is a key in self
, otherwise false
.
Yields each environment variable name and its value as a 2-element Array
, returning a Hash
of the names and values for which the block returns a truthy value:
ENV.replace('foo' => '0', 'bar' => '1', 'baz' => '2') ENV.select { |name, value| name.start_with?('b') } # => {"bar"=>"1", "baz"=>"2"} ENV.filter { |name, value| name.start_with?('b') } # => {"bar"=>"1", "baz"=>"2"}
Returns an Enumerator
if no block given:
e = ENV.select # => #<Enumerator: {"bar"=>"1", "baz"=>"2", "foo"=>"0"}:select> e.each { |name, value | name.start_with?('b') } # => {"bar"=>"1", "baz"=>"2"} e = ENV.filter # => #<Enumerator: {"bar"=>"1", "baz"=>"2", "foo"=>"0"}:filter> e.each { |name, value | name.start_with?('b') } # => {"bar"=>"1", "baz"=>"2"}
Yields each environment variable name and its value as a 2-element Array
, deleting each entry for which the block returns false
or nil
, and returning ENV
if any deletions made, or nil
otherwise:
ENV.replace('foo' => '0', 'bar' => '1', 'baz' => '2') ENV.select! { |name, value| name.start_with?('b') } # => ENV ENV # => {"bar"=>"1", "baz"=>"2"} ENV.select! { |name, value| true } # => nil ENV.replace('foo' => '0', 'bar' => '1', 'baz' => '2') ENV.filter! { |name, value| name.start_with?('b') } # => ENV ENV # => {"bar"=>"1", "baz"=>"2"} ENV.filter! { |name, value| true } # => nil
Returns an Enumerator
if no block given:
ENV.replace('foo' => '0', 'bar' => '1', 'baz' => '2') e = ENV.select! # => #<Enumerator: {"bar"=>"1", "baz"=>"2"}:select!> e.each { |name, value| name.start_with?('b') } # => ENV ENV # => {"bar"=>"1", "baz"=>"2"} e.each { |name, value| true } # => nil ENV.replace('foo' => '0', 'bar' => '1', 'baz' => '2') e = ENV.filter! # => #<Enumerator: {"bar"=>"1", "baz"=>"2"}:filter!> e.each { |name, value| name.start_with?('b') } # => ENV ENV # => {"bar"=>"1", "baz"=>"2"} e.each { |name, value| true } # => nil
Returns a Hash
whose keys are the ENV
values, and whose values are the corresponding ENV
names:
ENV.replace('foo' => '0', 'bar' => '1') ENV.invert # => {"1"=>"bar", "0"=>"foo"}
For a duplicate ENV
value, overwrites the hash entry:
ENV.replace('foo' => '0', 'bar' => '0') ENV.invert # => {"0"=>"foo"}
Note that the order of the ENV
processing is OS-dependent, which means that the order of overwriting is also OS-dependent. See About Ordering.
Returns true
if there is an environment variable with the given name
:
ENV.replace('foo' => '0', 'bar' => '1') ENV.include?('foo') # => true
Returns false
if name
is a valid String
and there is no such environment variable:
ENV.include?('baz') # => false
Returns false
if name
is the empty String
or is a String
containing character '='
:
ENV.include?('') # => false ENV.include?('=') # => false
Raises an exception if name
is a String
containing the NUL character "\0"
:
ENV.include?("\0") # Raises ArgumentError (bad environment variable name: contains null byte)
Raises an exception if name
has an encoding that is not ASCII-compatible:
ENV.include?("\xa1\xa1".force_encoding(Encoding::UTF_16LE)) # Raises ArgumentError (bad environment variable name: ASCII incompatible encoding: UTF-16LE)
Raises an exception if name
is not a String:
ENV.include?(Object.new) # TypeError (no implicit conversion of Object into String)
Raises TypeError
, because ENV
is a wrapper for the process-wide environment variables and a clone is useless. Use to_h to get a copy of ENV
data as a hash.
Returns the next line from the current file in ARGF
.
By default lines are assumed to be separated by $/
; to use a different character as a separator, supply it as a String
for the sep argument.
The optional limit argument specifies how many characters of each line to return. By default all characters are returned.
See IO.readlines
for details about getline_args.
Reads the next character from ARGF
and returns it as a String
. Returns nil
at the end of the stream.
ARGF
treats the files named on the command line as a single file created by concatenating their contents. After returning the last character of the first file, it returns the first character of the second file, and so on.
For example:
$ echo "foo" > file $ ruby argf.rb file ARGF.getc #=> "f" ARGF.getc #=> "o" ARGF.getc #=> "o" ARGF.getc #=> "\n" ARGF.getc #=> nil ARGF.getc #=> nil
Gets the next 8-bit byte (0..255) from ARGF
. Returns nil
if called at the end of the stream.
For example:
$ echo "foo" > file $ ruby argf.rb file ARGF.getbyte #=> 102 ARGF.getbyte #=> 111 ARGF.getbyte #=> 111 ARGF.getbyte #=> 10 ARGF.getbyte #=> nil
Closes the current file and skips to the next file in ARGV. If there are no more files to open, just closes the current file. STDIN will not be closed.
For example:
$ ruby argf.rb foo bar ARGF.filename #=> "foo" ARGF.close ARGF.filename #=> "bar" ARGF.close
Returns true if the current file has been closed; false otherwise. Use ARGF.close
to actually close the current file.
This method must be overridden by subclasses and should return the object method calls are being delegated to.
Returns the current object method calls are being delegated to.
Returns revision information for the erb.rb module.
Sets optional filename and line number that will be used in ERB
code evaluation and error reporting. See also filename=
and lineno=
erb = ERB.new('<%= some_x %>') erb.render # undefined local variable or method `some_x' # from (erb):1 erb.location = ['file.erb', 3] # All subsequent error reporting would use new location erb.render # undefined local variable or method `some_x' # from file.erb:4
Returns true if the ipaddr is a loopback address. Loopback IPv4 addresses in the IPv4-mapped IPv6 address range are also considered as loopback addresses.