зеркало из https://github.com/github/ruby.git
317 строки
8.9 KiB
Ruby
317 строки
8.9 KiB
Ruby
module Kernel
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#
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# call-seq:
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# obj.class -> class
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#
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# Returns the class of <i>obj</i>. This method must always be called
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# with an explicit receiver, as #class is also a reserved word in
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# Ruby.
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#
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# 1.class #=> Integer
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# self.class #=> Object
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#--
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# Equivalent to \c Object\#class in Ruby.
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#
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# Returns the class of \c obj, skipping singleton classes or module inclusions.
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#++
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#
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def class
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Primitive.attr! :leaf
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Primitive.cexpr! 'rb_obj_class(self)'
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end
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#
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# call-seq:
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# obj.clone(freeze: nil) -> an_object
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#
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# Produces a shallow copy of <i>obj</i>---the instance variables of
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# <i>obj</i> are copied, but not the objects they reference.
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# #clone copies the frozen value state of <i>obj</i>, unless the
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# +:freeze+ keyword argument is given with a false or true value.
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# See also the discussion under Object#dup.
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#
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# class Klass
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# attr_accessor :str
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# end
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# s1 = Klass.new #=> #<Klass:0x401b3a38>
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# s1.str = "Hello" #=> "Hello"
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# s2 = s1.clone #=> #<Klass:0x401b3998 @str="Hello">
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# s2.str[1,4] = "i" #=> "i"
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# s1.inspect #=> "#<Klass:0x401b3a38 @str=\"Hi\">"
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# s2.inspect #=> "#<Klass:0x401b3998 @str=\"Hi\">"
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#
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# This method may have class-specific behavior. If so, that
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# behavior will be documented under the #+initialize_copy+ method of
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# the class.
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#
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def clone(freeze: nil)
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Primitive.rb_obj_clone2(freeze)
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end
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#
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# call-seq:
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# obj.frozen? -> true or false
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#
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# Returns the freeze status of <i>obj</i>.
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#
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# a = [ "a", "b", "c" ]
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# a.freeze #=> ["a", "b", "c"]
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# a.frozen? #=> true
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#--
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# Determines if the object is frozen. Equivalent to `Object#frozen?` in Ruby.
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# @param[in] obj the object to be determines
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# @retval Qtrue if frozen
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# @retval Qfalse if not frozen
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#++
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#
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def frozen?
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Primitive.attr! :leaf
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Primitive.cexpr! 'rb_obj_frozen_p(self)'
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end
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#
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# call-seq:
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# obj.tap {|x| block } -> obj
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#
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# Yields self to the block, and then returns self.
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# The primary purpose of this method is to "tap into" a method chain,
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# in order to perform operations on intermediate results within the chain.
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#
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# (1..10) .tap {|x| puts "original: #{x}" }
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# .to_a .tap {|x| puts "array: #{x}" }
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# .select {|x| x.even? } .tap {|x| puts "evens: #{x}" }
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# .map {|x| x*x } .tap {|x| puts "squares: #{x}" }
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#
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#--
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# \private
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#++
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#
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def tap
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Primitive.attr! :inline_block
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yield(self)
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self
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end
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#
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# call-seq:
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# obj.then {|x| block } -> an_object
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#
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# Yields self to the block and returns the result of the block.
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#
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# 3.next.then {|x| x**x }.to_s #=> "256"
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#
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# Good usage for +then+ is value piping in method chains:
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#
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# require 'open-uri'
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# require 'json'
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#
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# construct_url(arguments).
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# then {|url| URI(url).read }.
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# then {|response| JSON.parse(response) }
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#
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# When called without block, the method returns +Enumerator+,
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# which can be used, for example, for conditional
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# circuit-breaking:
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#
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# # meets condition, no-op
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# 1.then.detect(&:odd?) # => 1
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# # does not meet condition, drop value
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# 2.then.detect(&:odd?) # => nil
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#
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# Good usage for +then+ is value piping in method chains:
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#
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# require 'open-uri'
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# require 'json'
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#
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# construct_url(arguments).
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# then {|url| URI(url).read }.
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# then {|response| JSON.parse(response) }
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#
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def then
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Primitive.attr! :inline_block
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unless defined?(yield)
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return Primitive.cexpr! 'SIZED_ENUMERATOR(self, 0, 0, rb_obj_size)'
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end
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yield(self)
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end
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#
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# call-seq:
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# obj.yield_self {|x| block } -> an_object
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#
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# Yields self to the block and returns the result of the block.
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#
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# "my string".yield_self {|s| s.upcase } #=> "MY STRING"
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#
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def yield_self
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Primitive.attr! :inline_block
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unless defined?(yield)
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return Primitive.cexpr! 'SIZED_ENUMERATOR(self, 0, 0, rb_obj_size)'
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end
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yield(self)
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end
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module_function
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# call-seq:
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# loop { block }
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# loop -> an_enumerator
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#
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# Repeatedly executes the block.
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#
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# If no block is given, an enumerator is returned instead.
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#
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# loop do
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# print "Input: "
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# line = gets
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# break if !line or line =~ /^q/i
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# # ...
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# end
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#
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# StopIteration raised in the block breaks the loop. In this case,
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# loop returns the "result" value stored in the exception.
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#
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# enum = Enumerator.new { |y|
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# y << "one"
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# y << "two"
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# :ok
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# }
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#
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# result = loop {
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# puts enum.next
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# } #=> :ok
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def loop
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Primitive.attr! :inline_block
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unless defined?(yield)
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return Primitive.cexpr! 'SIZED_ENUMERATOR(self, 0, 0, rb_f_loop_size)'
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end
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begin
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while true
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yield
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end
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rescue StopIteration => e
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e.result
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end
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end
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#
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# call-seq:
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# Float(arg, exception: true) -> float or nil
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#
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# Returns <i>arg</i> converted to a float. Numeric types are
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# converted directly, and with exception to String and
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# <code>nil</code> the rest are converted using
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# <i>arg</i><code>.to_f</code>. Converting a String with invalid
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# characters will result in a ArgumentError. Converting
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# <code>nil</code> generates a TypeError. Exceptions can be
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# suppressed by passing <code>exception: false</code>.
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#
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# Float(1) #=> 1.0
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# Float("123.456") #=> 123.456
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# Float("123.0_badstring") #=> ArgumentError: invalid value for Float(): "123.0_badstring"
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# Float(nil) #=> TypeError: can't convert nil into Float
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# Float("123.0_badstring", exception: false) #=> nil
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#
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def Float(arg, exception: true)
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if Primitive.mandatory_only?
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Primitive.rb_f_float1(arg)
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else
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Primitive.rb_f_float(arg, exception)
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end
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end
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# call-seq:
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# Integer(object, base = 0, exception: true) -> integer or nil
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#
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# Returns an integer converted from +object+.
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#
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# Tries to convert +object+ to an integer
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# using +to_int+ first and +to_i+ second;
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# see below for exceptions.
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#
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# With a non-zero +base+, +object+ must be a string or convertible
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# to a string.
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#
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# ==== numeric objects
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#
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# With integer argument +object+ given, returns +object+:
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#
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# Integer(1) # => 1
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# Integer(-1) # => -1
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#
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# With floating-point argument +object+ given,
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# returns +object+ truncated to an integer:
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#
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# Integer(1.9) # => 1 # Rounds toward zero.
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# Integer(-1.9) # => -1 # Rounds toward zero.
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#
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# ==== string objects
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#
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# With string argument +object+ and zero +base+ given,
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# returns +object+ converted to an integer in base 10:
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#
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# Integer('100') # => 100
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# Integer('-100') # => -100
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#
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# With +base+ zero, string +object+ may contain leading characters
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# to specify the actual base (radix indicator):
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#
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# Integer('0100') # => 64 # Leading '0' specifies base 8.
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# Integer('0b100') # => 4 # Leading '0b', specifies base 2.
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# Integer('0x100') # => 256 # Leading '0x' specifies base 16.
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#
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# With a positive +base+ (in range 2..36) given, returns +object+
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# converted to an integer in the given base:
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#
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# Integer('100', 2) # => 4
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# Integer('100', 8) # => 64
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# Integer('-100', 16) # => -256
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#
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# With a negative +base+ (in range -36..-2) given, returns +object+
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# converted to an integer in the radix indicator if exists or
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# +-base+:
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#
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# Integer('0x100', -2) # => 256
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# Integer('100', -2) # => 4
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# Integer('0b100', -8) # => 4
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# Integer('100', -8) # => 64
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# Integer('0o100', -10) # => 64
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# Integer('100', -10) # => 100
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#
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# +base+ -1 is equal the -10 case.
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#
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# When converting strings, surrounding whitespace and embedded underscores
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# are allowed and ignored:
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#
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# Integer(' 100 ') # => 100
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# Integer('-1_0_0', 16) # => -256
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#
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# ==== other classes
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#
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# Examples with +object+ of various other classes:
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#
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# Integer(Rational(9, 10)) # => 0 # Rounds toward zero.
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# Integer(Complex(2, 0)) # => 2 # Imaginary part must be zero.
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# Integer(Time.now) # => 1650974042
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#
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# ==== keywords
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#
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# With optional keyword argument +exception+ given as +true+ (the default):
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#
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# - Raises TypeError if +object+ does not respond to +to_int+ or +to_i+.
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# - Raises TypeError if +object+ is +nil+.
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# - Raise ArgumentError if +object+ is an invalid string.
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#
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# With +exception+ given as +false+, an exception of any kind is suppressed
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# and +nil+ is returned.
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def Integer(arg, base = 0, exception: true)
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if Primitive.mandatory_only?
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Primitive.rb_f_integer1(arg)
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else
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Primitive.rb_f_integer(arg, base, exception);
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end
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end
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end
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