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Iterates over strongly connected component in the subgraph reachable from node.

Return value is unspecified.

each_strongly_connected_component_from doesn’t call tsort_each_node.

class G
  include TSort
  def initialize(g)
    @g = g
  end
  def tsort_each_child(n, &b) @g[n].each(&b) end
  def tsort_each_node(&b) @g.each_key(&b) end
end

graph = G.new({1=>[2, 3], 2=>[4], 3=>[2, 4], 4=>[]})
graph.each_strongly_connected_component_from(2) {|scc| p scc }
#=> [4]
#   [2]

graph = G.new({1=>[2], 2=>[3, 4], 3=>[2], 4=>[]})
graph.each_strongly_connected_component_from(2) {|scc| p scc }
#=> [4]
#   [2, 3]

Iterates over strongly connected components in a graph. The graph is represented by node and each_child.

node is the first node. each_child should have call method which takes a node argument and yields for each child node.

Return value is unspecified.

TSort.each_strongly_connected_component_from is a class method and it doesn’t need a class to represent a graph which includes TSort.

graph = {1=>[2], 2=>[3, 4], 3=>[2], 4=>[]}
each_child = lambda {|n, &b| graph[n].each(&b) }
TSort.each_strongly_connected_component_from(1, each_child) {|scc|
  p scc
}
#=> [4]
#   [2, 3]
#   [1]

Called before each event with line/column information.

No documentation available
No documentation available
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Sets the continue timeout value, which is the number of seconds to wait for an expected 100 Continue response. If the HTTP object does not receive a response in this many seconds it sends the request body.

No documentation available

def safe_navigation?: () -> bool

def safe_navigation?: () -> bool

def safe_navigation?: () -> bool

def safe_navigation?: () -> bool

def safe_navigation?: () -> bool

def safe_navigation?: () -> bool

def safe_navigation?: () -> bool

def safe_navigation?: () -> bool

def safe_navigation?: () -> bool

Add a command-line option and handler to the command.

See Gem::OptionParser#make_switch for an explanation of opts.

handler will be called with two values, the value of the argument and the options hash.

If the first argument of add_option is a Symbol, it’s used to group options in output. See ‘gem help list` for an example.

Mark a command-line option as deprecated, and optionally specify a deprecation horizon.

Note that with the current implementation, every version of the option needs to be explicitly deprecated, so to deprecate an option defined as

add_option('-t', '--[no-]test', 'Set test mode') do |value, options|
  # ... stuff ...
end

you would need to explicitly add a call to ‘deprecate_option` for every version of the option you want to deprecate, like

deprecate_option('-t')
deprecate_option('--test')
deprecate_option('--no-test')

Merge a set of command options with the set of default options (without modifying the default option hash).

Count the number of gemspecs in the list specs that are not in ignored.

A recommended version for use with a ~> Requirement.

Specifies the rdoc options to be used when generating API documentation.

Usage:

spec.rdoc_options << '--title' << 'Rake -- Ruby Make' <<
  '--main' << 'README' <<
  '--line-numbers'

Keeps track of all currently known specifications

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