Results for: "Array"

Returns an array of syntax error messages

If no missing pairs are found it falls back on the original error messages

No documentation available

Returns the parser to be used.

Unless a URI::Parser is defined, DEFAULT_PARSER is used.

Checks the fragment v component against the URI::Parser Regexp for :FRAGMENT.

Args

v

String

Description

Public setter for the fragment component v (with validation).

Usage

require 'uri'

uri = URI.parse("http://my.example.com/?id=25#time=1305212049")
uri.fragment = "time=1305212086"
uri.to_s  #=> "http://my.example.com/?id=25#time=1305212086"

Args

uri

String

Description

Parses uri and constructs either matching URI scheme object (File, FTP, HTTP, HTTPS, LDAP, LDAPS, or MailTo) or URI::Generic.

Usage

p = URI::Parser.new
p.parse("ldap://ldap.example.com/dc=example?user=john")
#=> #<URI::LDAP ldap://ldap.example.com/dc=example?user=john>

Args

str

String to search

schemes

Patterns to apply to str

Description

Attempts to parse and merge a set of URIs. If no block given, then returns the result, else it calls block for each element in result.

See also URI::Parser.make_regexp.

Removes all objects from the queue.

Removes all objects from the queue.

Removes all map entries; returns self.

Parses the given string into an abstract syntax tree, returning the root node of that tree.

RubyVM::AbstractSyntaxTree.parse("x = 1 + 2")
# => #<RubyVM::AbstractSyntaxTree::Node:SCOPE@1:0-1:9>

If keep_script_lines: true option is provided, the text of the parsed source is associated with nodes and is available via Node#script_lines.

If keep_tokens: true option is provided, Node#tokens are populated.

SyntaxError is raised if the given string is invalid syntax. To overwrite this behavior, error_tolerant: true can be provided. In this case, the parser will produce a tree where expressions with syntax errors would be represented by Node with type=:ERROR.

root = RubyVM::AbstractSyntaxTree.parse("x = 1; p(x; y=2")
# <internal:ast>:33:in `parse': syntax error, unexpected ';', expecting ')' (SyntaxError)
# x = 1; p(x; y=2
#           ^

root = RubyVM::AbstractSyntaxTree.parse("x = 1; p(x; y=2", error_tolerant: true)
# (SCOPE@1:0-1:15
#  tbl: [:x, :y]
#  args: nil
#  body: (BLOCK@1:0-1:15 (LASGN@1:0-1:5 :x (LIT@1:4-1:5 1)) (ERROR@1:7-1:11) (LASGN@1:12-1:15 :y (LIT@1:14-1:15 2))))
root.children.last.children
# [(LASGN@1:0-1:5 :x (LIT@1:4-1:5 1)),
#  (ERROR@1:7-1:11),
#  (LASGN@1:12-1:15 :y (LIT@1:14-1:15 2))]

Note that parsing continues even after the errored expression.

If a block is given, it prints out each of the elements encountered. Block parameters are (in that order):

Example

der = File.binread('asn1data.der')
OpenSSL::ASN1.traverse(der) do | depth, offset, header_len, length, constructed, tag_class, tag|
  puts "Depth: #{depth} Offset: #{offset} Length: #{length}"
  puts "Header length: #{header_len} Tag: #{tag} Tag class: #{tag_class} Constructed: #{constructed}"
end

Reads at most maxlen bytes from the stream. If buf is provided it must reference a string which will receive the data.

See IO#readpartial for full details.

Reads a one-character string from the stream. Raises an EOFError at end of file.

Start streaming using encoding

Returns whether the form contained multipart/form-data

Generate a TextArea element, as a String.

name is the name of the textarea. cols is the number of columns and rows is the number of rows in the display.

Alternatively, the attributes can be specified as a hash.

The body is provided by the passed-in no-argument block

textarea("name")
   # = textarea("NAME" => "name", "COLS" => 70, "ROWS" => 10)

textarea("name", 40, 5)
   # = textarea("NAME" => "name", "COLS" => 40, "ROWS" => 5)
No documentation available

Returns an array of Range objects that represent the value of field 'Range', or nil if there is no such field; see Range request header:

req = Net::HTTP::Get.new(uri)
req['Range'] = 'bytes=0-99,200-299,400-499'
req.range # => [0..99, 200..299, 400..499]
req.delete('Range')
req.range # # => nil
No documentation available

returns a charset parameter in Content-Type field. It is downcased for canonicalization.

If charset parameter is not given but a block is given, the block is called and its result is returned. It can be used to guess charset.

If charset parameter and block is not given, nil is returned except text type. In that case, “utf-8” is returned as defined by RFC6838 4.2.1

Parses self destructively and returns self containing the rest arguments left unparsed.

Generates formatted random number from raw random bytes. See Random#rand.

No documentation available

Displays the given statement on the standard output (or equivalent).

Load extra data embed into binary format String object.

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