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ruby22
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2.2.0
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English.rb
(6.42 KB)
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abbrev.rb
(3.46 KB)
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base64.rb
(2.63 KB)
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benchmark.rb
(17.73 KB)
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cgi
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cgi.rb
(9.77 KB)
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cmath.rb
(9.34 KB)
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csv.rb
(82.45 KB)
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date.rb
(980 B)
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debug.rb
(29.08 KB)
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delegate.rb
(10.71 KB)
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digest
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digest.rb
(2.79 KB)
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drb
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drb.rb
(19 B)
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e2mmap.rb
(3.77 KB)
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erb.rb
(26.35 KB)
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expect.rb
(2.14 KB)
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fiddle
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fiddle.rb
(1.65 KB)
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fileutils.rb
(47.46 KB)
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find.rb
(2.48 KB)
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forwardable.rb
(8.22 KB)
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getoptlong.rb
(15.38 KB)
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io
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ipaddr.rb
(17.06 KB)
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irb
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irb.rb
(20.03 KB)
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json
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json.rb
(1.74 KB)
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kconv.rb
(5.74 KB)
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logger.rb
(20.33 KB)
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mathn.rb
(3.84 KB)
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matrix
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matrix.rb
(53.14 KB)
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mkmf.rb
(82.59 KB)
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monitor.rb
(6.93 KB)
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mutex_m.rb
(2 KB)
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net
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observer.rb
(5.8 KB)
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open-uri.rb
(24.58 KB)
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open3.rb
(20.55 KB)
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openssl
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openssl.rb
(528 B)
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optionparser.rb
(28 B)
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optparse
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optparse.rb
(52.05 KB)
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ostruct.rb
(8.66 KB)
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pathname.rb
(15.58 KB)
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pp.rb
(14.16 KB)
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prettyprint.rb
(15.85 KB)
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prime.rb
(13.11 KB)
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profile.rb
(205 B)
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profiler.rb
(4.51 KB)
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pstore.rb
(14.55 KB)
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psych
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psych.rb
(14.88 KB)
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racc
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rake
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rake.rb
(2.23 KB)
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rbconfig
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rdoc
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rdoc.rb
(4.96 KB)
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resolv-replace.rb
(1.73 KB)
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resolv.rb
(72.06 KB)
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rexml
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rinda
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ripper
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ripper.rb
(2.53 KB)
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rss
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rss.rb
(2.84 KB)
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rubygems
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rubygems.rb
(31.85 KB)
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scanf.rb
(23.54 KB)
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securerandom.rb
(9.2 KB)
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set.rb
(19.15 KB)
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shell
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shell.rb
(11.3 KB)
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shellwords.rb
(5.96 KB)
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singleton.rb
(4.02 KB)
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socket.rb
(25.6 KB)
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sync.rb
(7.25 KB)
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syslog
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tempfile.rb
(11.11 KB)
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thwait.rb
(3.31 KB)
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time.rb
(22.25 KB)
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timeout.rb
(3.64 KB)
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tmpdir.rb
(4.13 KB)
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tracer.rb
(6.4 KB)
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tsort.rb
(14.27 KB)
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ubygems.rb
(268 B)
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un.rb
(8.87 KB)
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unicode_normalize
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unicode_normalize.rb
(3.16 KB)
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uri
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uri.rb
(3.07 KB)
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weakref.rb
(2.92 KB)
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webrick
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webrick.rb
(6.69 KB)
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x86_64-linux
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xmlrpc
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xmlrpc.rb
(8.49 KB)
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yaml
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yaml.rb
(1.7 KB)
Editing: ostruct.rb
# # = ostruct.rb: OpenStruct implementation # # Author:: Yukihiro Matsumoto # Documentation:: Gavin Sinclair # # OpenStruct allows the creation of data objects with arbitrary attributes. # See OpenStruct for an example. # # # An OpenStruct is a data structure, similar to a Hash, that allows the # definition of arbitrary attributes with their accompanying values. This is # accomplished by using Ruby's metaprogramming to define methods on the class # itself. # # == Examples # # require "ostruct" # # person = OpenStruct.new # person.name = "John Smith" # person.age = 70 # # person.name # => "John Smith" # person.age # => 70 # person.address # => nil # # An OpenStruct employs a Hash internally to store the attributes and values # and can even be initialized with one: # # australia = OpenStruct.new(:country => "Australia", :capital => "Canberra") # # => #<OpenStruct country="Australia", capital="Canberra"> # # Hash keys with spaces or characters that could normally not be used for # method calls (e.g. <code>()[]*</code>) will not be immediately available # on the OpenStruct object as a method for retrieval or assignment, but can # still be reached through the Object#send method. # # measurements = OpenStruct.new("length (in inches)" => 24) # measurements.send("length (in inches)") # => 24 # # message = OpenStruct.new(:queued? => true) # message.queued? # => true # message.send("queued?=", false) # message.queued? # => false # # Removing the presence of an attribute requires the execution of the # delete_field method as setting the property value to +nil+ will not # remove the attribute. # # first_pet = OpenStruct.new(:name => "Rowdy", :owner => "John Smith") # second_pet = OpenStruct.new(:name => "Rowdy") # # first_pet.owner = nil # first_pet # => #<OpenStruct name="Rowdy", owner=nil> # first_pet == second_pet # => false # # first_pet.delete_field(:owner) # first_pet # => #<OpenStruct name="Rowdy"> # first_pet == second_pet # => true # # # == Implementation # # An OpenStruct utilizes Ruby's method lookup structure to find and define the # necessary methods for properties. This is accomplished through the methods # method_missing and define_singleton_method. # # This should be a consideration if there is a concern about the performance of # the objects that are created, as there is much more overhead in the setting # of these properties compared to using a Hash or a Struct. # class OpenStruct # # Creates a new OpenStruct object. By default, the resulting OpenStruct # object will have no attributes. # # The optional +hash+, if given, will generate attributes and values # (can be a Hash, an OpenStruct or a Struct). # For example: # # require "ostruct" # hash = { "country" => "Australia", :capital => "Canberra" } # data = OpenStruct.new(hash) # # data # => #<OpenStruct country="Australia", capital="Canberra"> # def initialize(hash=nil) @table = {} if hash hash.each_pair do |k, v| k = k.to_sym @table[k] = v new_ostruct_member(k) end end end # Duplicates an OpenStruct object's Hash table. def initialize_copy(orig) # :nodoc: super @table = @table.dup @table.each_key{|key| new_ostruct_member(key)} end # # Converts the OpenStruct to a hash with keys representing # each attribute (as symbols) and their corresponding values. # # require "ostruct" # data = OpenStruct.new("country" => "Australia", :capital => "Canberra") # data.to_h # => {:country => "Australia", :capital => "Canberra" } # def to_h @table.dup end # # :call-seq: # ostruct.each_pair {|name, value| block } -> ostruct # ostruct.each_pair -> Enumerator # # Yields all attributes (as symbols) along with the corresponding values # or returns an enumerator if no block is given. # # require "ostruct" # data = OpenStruct.new("country" => "Australia", :capital => "Canberra") # data.each_pair.to_a # => [[:country, "Australia"], [:capital, "Canberra"]] # def each_pair return to_enum(__method__) { @table.size } unless block_given? @table.each_pair{|p| yield p} self end # # Provides marshalling support for use by the Marshal library. # def marshal_dump @table end # # Provides marshalling support for use by the Marshal library. # def marshal_load(x) @table = x @table.each_key{|key| new_ostruct_member(key)} end # # Used internally to check if the OpenStruct is able to be # modified before granting access to the internal Hash table to be modified. # def modifiable begin @modifiable = true rescue raise RuntimeError, "can't modify frozen #{self.class}", caller(3) end @table end protected :modifiable # # Used internally to defined properties on the # OpenStruct. It does this by using the metaprogramming function # define_singleton_method for both the getter method and the setter method. # def new_ostruct_member(name) name = name.to_sym unless respond_to?(name) define_singleton_method(name) { @table[name] } define_singleton_method("#{name}=") { |x| modifiable[name] = x } end name end protected :new_ostruct_member def method_missing(mid, *args) # :nodoc: mname = mid.id2name len = args.length if mname.chomp!('=') if len != 1 raise ArgumentError, "wrong number of arguments (#{len} for 1)", caller(1) end modifiable[new_ostruct_member(mname)] = args[0] elsif len == 0 @table[mid] else err = NoMethodError.new "undefined method `#{mid}' for #{self}", mid, args err.set_backtrace caller(1) raise err end end # # :call-seq: # ostruct[name] -> object # # Returns the value of an attribute. # # require "ostruct" # person = OpenStruct.new("name" => "John Smith", "age" => 70) # person[:age] # => 70, same as person.age # def [](name) @table[name.to_sym] end # # :call-seq: # ostruct[name] = obj -> obj # # Sets the value of an attribute. # # require "ostruct" # person = OpenStruct.new("name" => "John Smith", "age" => 70) # person[:age] = 42 # equivalent to person.age = 42 # person.age # => 42 # def []=(name, value) modifiable[new_ostruct_member(name)] = value end # # Removes the named field from the object. Returns the value that the field # contained if it was defined. # # require "ostruct" # # person = OpenStruct.new(name: "John", age: 70, pension: 300) # # person.delete_field("age") # => 70 # person # => #<OpenStruct name="John", pension=300> # # Setting the value to +nil+ will not remove the attribute: # # person.pension = nil # person # => #<OpenStruct name="John", pension=nil> # def delete_field(name) sym = name.to_sym singleton_class.__send__(:remove_method, sym, "#{sym}=") @table.delete sym end InspectKey = :__inspect_key__ # :nodoc: # # Returns a string containing a detailed summary of the keys and values. # def inspect str = "#<#{self.class}" ids = (Thread.current[InspectKey] ||= []) if ids.include?(object_id) return str << ' ...>' end ids << object_id begin first = true for k,v in @table str << "," unless first first = false str << " #{k}=#{v.inspect}" end return str << '>' ensure ids.pop end end alias :to_s :inspect attr_reader :table # :nodoc: protected :table # # Compares this object and +other+ for equality. An OpenStruct is equal to # +other+ when +other+ is an OpenStruct and the two objects' Hash tables are # equal. # # require "ostruct" # first_pet = OpenStruct.new("name" => "Rowdy") # second_pet = OpenStruct.new(:name => "Rowdy") # third_pet = OpenStruct.new("name" => "Rowdy", :age => nil) # # first_pet == second_pet # => true # first_pet == third_pet # => false # def ==(other) return false unless other.kind_of?(OpenStruct) @table == other.table end # # Compares this object and +other+ for equality. An OpenStruct is eql? to # +other+ when +other+ is an OpenStruct and the two objects' Hash tables are # eql?. # def eql?(other) return false unless other.kind_of?(OpenStruct) @table.eql?(other.table) end # Computes a hash code for this OpenStruct. # Two OpenStruct objects with the same content will have the same hash code # (and will compare using #eql?). # # See also Object#hash. def hash @table.hash end end
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