Returns the Integer
index of the first substring that matches the given regexp
, or nil
if no match found:
'foo' =~ /f/ # => 0 'foo' =~ /o/ # => 1 'foo' =~ /x/ # => nil
Note: also updates Global Variables at Regexp
.
If the given object
is not a Regexp
, returns the value returned by object =~ self
.
Note that string =~ regexp
is different from regexp =~ string
(see Regexp#=~
):
number= nil "no. 9" =~ /(?<number>\d+)/ number # => nil (not assigned) /(?<number>\d+)/ =~ "no. 9" number #=> "9"
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 = 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
Returns the successor to self
. The successor is calculated by incrementing characters.
The first character to be incremented is the rightmost alphanumeric: or, if no alphanumerics, the rightmost character:
'THX1138'.succ # => "THX1139" '<<koala>>'.succ # => "<<koalb>>" '***'.succ # => '**+'
The successor to a digit is another digit, “carrying” to the next-left character for a “rollover” from 9 to 0, and prepending another digit if necessary:
'00'.succ # => "01" '09'.succ # => "10" '99'.succ # => "100"
The successor to a letter is another letter of the same case, carrying to the next-left character for a rollover, and prepending another same-case letter if necessary:
'aa'.succ # => "ab" 'az'.succ # => "ba" 'zz'.succ # => "aaa" 'AA'.succ # => "AB" 'AZ'.succ # => "BA" 'ZZ'.succ # => "AAA"
The successor to a non-alphanumeric character is the next character in the underlying character set’s collating sequence, carrying to the next-left character for a rollover, and prepending another character if necessary:
s = 0.chr * 3 s # => "\x00\x00\x00" s.succ # => "\x00\x00\x01" s = 255.chr * 3 s # => "\xFF\xFF\xFF" s.succ # => "\x01\x00\x00\x00"
Carrying can occur between and among mixtures of alphanumeric characters:
s = 'zz99zz99' s.succ # => "aaa00aa00" s = '99zz99zz' s.succ # => "100aa00aa"
The successor to an empty String
is a new empty String
:
''.succ # => ""
Equivalent to String#succ
, but modifies self
in place; returns self
.
Returns the successor to self
. The successor is calculated by incrementing characters.
The first character to be incremented is the rightmost alphanumeric: or, if no alphanumerics, the rightmost character:
'THX1138'.succ # => "THX1139" '<<koala>>'.succ # => "<<koalb>>" '***'.succ # => '**+'
The successor to a digit is another digit, “carrying” to the next-left character for a “rollover” from 9 to 0, and prepending another digit if necessary:
'00'.succ # => "01" '09'.succ # => "10" '99'.succ # => "100"
The successor to a letter is another letter of the same case, carrying to the next-left character for a rollover, and prepending another same-case letter if necessary:
'aa'.succ # => "ab" 'az'.succ # => "ba" 'zz'.succ # => "aaa" 'AA'.succ # => "AB" 'AZ'.succ # => "BA" 'ZZ'.succ # => "AAA"
The successor to a non-alphanumeric character is the next character in the underlying character set’s collating sequence, carrying to the next-left character for a rollover, and prepending another character if necessary:
s = 0.chr * 3 s # => "\x00\x00\x00" s.succ # => "\x00\x00\x01" s = 255.chr * 3 s # => "\xFF\xFF\xFF" s.succ # => "\x01\x00\x00\x00"
Carrying can occur between and among mixtures of alphanumeric characters:
s = 'zz99zz99' s.succ # => "aaa00aa00" s = '99zz99zz' s.succ # => "100aa00aa"
The successor to an empty String
is a new empty String
:
''.succ # => ""
Equivalent to String#succ
, but modifies self
in place; returns self
.
With a block given, calls the block with each String
value returned by successive calls to String#succ
; the first value is self
, the next is self.succ
, and so on; the sequence terminates when value other_string
is reached; returns self
:
'a8'.upto('b6') {|s| print s, ' ' } # => "a8"
Output:
a8 a9 b0 b1 b2 b3 b4 b5 b6
If argument exclusive
is given as a truthy object, the last value is omitted:
'a8'.upto('b6', true) {|s| print s, ' ' } # => "a8"
Output:
a8 a9 b0 b1 b2 b3 b4 b5
If other_string
would not be reached, does not call the block:
'25'.upto('5') {|s| fail s } 'aa'.upto('a') {|s| fail s }
With no block given, returns a new Enumerator:
'a8'.upto('b6') # => #<Enumerator: "a8":upto("b6")>
Replaces the contents of self
with the contents of other_string
:
s = 'foo' # => "foo" s.replace('bar') # => "bar"
Returns a string containing the first character of self
:
s = 'foo' # => "foo" s.chr # => "f"
Returns the byte at zero-based index
as an integer, or nil
if index
is out of range:
s = 'abcde' # => "abcde" s.getbyte(0) # => 97 s.getbyte(-1) # => 101 s.getbyte(5) # => nil
Related: String#setbyte
.
Sets the byte at zero-based index
to integer
; returns integer
:
s = 'abcde' # => "abcde" s.setbyte(0, 98) # => 98 s # => "bbcde"
Related: String#getbyte
.
Returns a substring of self
, or nil
if the substring cannot be constructed.
With integer arguments index
and length
given, returns the substring beginning at the given index
of the given length
(if possible), or nil
if length
is negative or index
falls outside of self
:
s = '0123456789' # => "0123456789" s.byteslice(2) # => "2" s.byteslice(200) # => nil s.byteslice(4, 3) # => "456" s.byteslice(4, 30) # => "456789" s.byteslice(4, -1) # => nil s.byteslice(40, 2) # => nil
In either case above, counts backwards from the end of self
if index
is negative:
s = '0123456789' # => "0123456789" s.byteslice(-4) # => "6" s.byteslice(-4, 3) # => "678"
With Range
argument range
given, returns byteslice(range.begin, range.size)
:
s = '0123456789' # => "0123456789" s.byteslice(4..6) # => "456" s.byteslice(-6..-4) # => "456" s.byteslice(5..2) # => "" # range.size is zero. s.byteslice(40..42) # => nil
In all cases, a returned string has the same encoding as self
:
s.encoding # => #<Encoding:UTF-8> s.byteslice(4).encoding # => #<Encoding:UTF-8>
Replaces some or all of the content of self
with str
, and returns self
. The portion of the string affected is determined using the same criteria as String#byteslice
, except that length
cannot be omitted. If the replacement string is not the same length as the text it is replacing, the string will be adjusted accordingly.
If str_index
and str_length
, or str_range
are given, the content of self
is replaced by str.byteslice(str_index, str_length) or str.byteslice(str_range); however the substring of str
is not allocated as a new string.
The form that take an Integer
will raise an IndexError
if the value is out of range; the Range
form will raise a RangeError
. If the beginning or ending offset does not land on character (codepoint) boundary, an IndexError
will be raised.
Returns a copy of self
with each invalid byte sequence replaced by the given replacement_string
.
With no block given and no argument, replaces each invalid sequence with the default replacement string ("�"
for a Unicode encoding, '?'
otherwise):
s = "foo\x81\x81bar" s.scrub # => "foo��bar"
With no block given and argument replacement_string
given, replaces each invalid sequence with that string:
"foo\x81\x81bar".scrub('xyzzy') # => "fooxyzzyxyzzybar"
With a block given, replaces each invalid sequence with the value of the block:
"foo\x81\x81bar".scrub {|bytes| p bytes; 'XYZZY' } # => "fooXYZZYXYZZYbar"
Output:
"\x81" "\x81"
Like String#scrub
, except that any replacements are made in self
.
Returns self
if self
is not frozen and can be mutated without warning issuance.
Otherwise returns self.dup
, which is not frozen.
Returns a frozen, possibly pre-existing copy of the string.
The returned String
will be deduplicated as long as it does not have any instance variables set on it and is not a String
subclass.
Note that -string
variant is more convenient for defining constants:
FILENAME = -'config/database.yml'
while dedup
is better suitable for using the method in chains of calculations:
@url_list.concat(urls.map(&:dedup))
Returns a printable version of self
, enclosed in double-quotes, with special characters escaped, and with non-printing characters replaced by hexadecimal notation:
"hello \n ''".dump # => "\"hello \\n ''\"" "\f\x00\xff\\\"".dump # => "\"\\f\\x00\\xFF\\\\\\\"\""
Related: String#undump
(inverse of String#dump
).
Returns an unescaped version of self
:
s_orig = "\f\x00\xff\\\"" # => "\f\u0000\xFF\\\"" s_dumped = s_orig.dump # => "\"\\f\\x00\\xFF\\\\\\\"\"" s_undumped = s_dumped.undump # => "\f\u0000\xFF\\\"" s_undumped == s_orig # => true
Related: String#dump
(inverse of String#undump
).
Returns a string containing the upcased characters in self
:
s = 'Hello World!' # => "Hello World!" s.upcase # => "HELLO WORLD!"
The casing may be affected by the given options
; see Case Mapping.
Related: String#upcase!
, String#downcase
, String#downcase!
.
Returns a string containing the downcased characters in self
:
s = 'Hello World!' # => "Hello World!" s.downcase # => "hello world!"
The casing may be affected by the given options
; see Case Mapping.
Related: String#downcase!
, String#upcase
, String#upcase!
.
Returns a string containing the characters in self
; the first character is upcased; the remaining characters are downcased:
s = 'hello World!' # => "hello World!" s.capitalize # => "Hello world!"
The casing may be affected by the given options
; see Case Mapping.
Related: String#capitalize!
.
Returns a string containing the characters in self
, with cases reversed; each uppercase character is downcased; each lowercase character is upcased:
s = 'Hello World!' # => "Hello World!" s.swapcase # => "hELLO wORLD!"
The casing may be affected by the given options
; see Case Mapping.
Related: String#swapcase!
.