[#23132] [Bug #1357] Fixing variables into specific CPU registers deemed overrated & may disturb compilers' optimizers — Ollivier Robert <redmine@...>
Bug #1357: Fixing variables into specific CPU registers deemed overrated & may disturb compilers' optimizers
[#23154] [Bug #1363] Wrong value for Hash of NaN — Heesob Park <redmine@...>
Bug #1363: Wrong value for Hash of NaN
Hi,
Hi,
Yukihiro Matsumoto wrote:
[#23168] [Bug #1367] flatten(0) is not consistent with flatten(), flatten(1), etc. — Paul Lewis <redmine@...>
Bug #1367: flatten(0) is not consistent with flatten(), flatten(1), etc.
Issue #1367 has been updated by Paul Lewis.
[#23174] [Feature #1371] FTPS Implicit — Daniel Parker <redmine@...>
Feature #1371: FTPS Implicit
[#23193] Regexp Encoding — James Gray <james@...>
I'm trying to document the Encoding Regexp objects receive for the
[#23194] [Feature #1377] Please provide constant File::NOATIME — Johan Walles <redmine@...>
Feature #1377: Please provide constant File::NOATIME
[#23231] What do you think about changing the return value of Kernel#require and Kernel#load to the source encoding of the required file? — =?ISO-8859-15?Q?Wolfgang_N=E1dasi-Donner?= <ed.odanow@...>
Dear Ruby developers and users!
Wolfgang N叩dasi-Donner wrote:
Wolfgang N叩dasi-Donner wrote:
Michael Neumann schrieb:
[#23252] [Bug #1392] Object#extend leaks memory on Ruby 1.9.1 — Muhammad Ali <redmine@...>
Bug #1392: Object#extend leaks memory on Ruby 1.9.1
[#23267] StringIO: RubySpec violation — Hongli Lai <hongli@...99.net>
I ran RubySpec against the 1.8.6-p368 release. It seems that
[#23289] [Bug #1399] Segmentation fault is raised when you use a postgres gem — Marcel Keil <redmine@...>
Bug #1399: Segmentation fault is raised when you use a postgres gem
[#23297] Ruby Oniguruma question — Ralf Junker <ralfjunker@...>
I see that the Ruby source code contains modified and more recent version of the Oniguruma regular expression library.
[#23305] [Bug #1403] Process.daemon should do a double fork to avoid problems with controlling terminals — Gary Wright <redmine@...>
Bug #1403: Process.daemon should do a double fork to avoid problems with controlling terminals
Hi,
[#23311] [Bug #1404] Net::HTTP::Post failing when a post field contains ":" — Ignacio Martín <redmine@...>
Bug #1404: Net::HTTP::Post failing when a post field contains ":"
[#23318] [Feature #1408] 0.1.to_r not equal to (1/10) — Heesob Park <redmine@...>
Feature #1408: 0.1.to_r not equal to (1/10)
Issue #1408 has been updated by tadayoshi funaba.
Hi,
Hi.
Issue #1408 has been updated by Marc-Andre Lafortune.
Issue #1408 has been updated by Roger Pack.
[#23321] [Bug #1412] 1.8.7-p160 extmk.rb fails when cross compiling — Luis Lavena <redmine@...>
Bug #1412: 1.8.7-p160 extmk.rb fails when cross compiling
[ruby-core:23196] Re: Regexp Encoding
James Gray wrote: > I'm trying to document the Encoding Regexp objects receive for the m17n > series on my blog. This is how I think it works: > > * A / literal is given a US-ASCII Encoding if it contains only 7-bit > characters > * A / literal receives the current source Encoding when it contains > 8-bit characters > * The old /u and /n style modifiers still work to force a UTF-8 or > US-ASCII Encoding There are /e (EUC-JP) and /s (Windows-31J). And these are set Regexp::FIXEDENCODING. This raise exceptions on strings with other encodings even if the regexp contains only 7-bit. The constant Regexp::FIXEDENCODING is defined in 1.9.2 but the value is also used in 1.9.1. > * A / literal that would be US-ASCII due to the source Encoding or /n > will be upgraded to ASCII-8BIT by hex, octal, control, meta, or > control-meta byte escapes (as discussed in [ruby-core:23184]) simillar to above, /n raise warnings on other than ASCII-8BIT strings. > * A / literal will receive a UTF-8 Encoding if it includes \u escapes > * Regexp objects constructed with Regexp::new() receive the Encoding of > the String passed containing the regular expression > Am I right so far? Am I missing any variations? > > Am I right that Regexp's favor US-ASCII because it maximizes their > compatibility? It makes it so you can use them on any ASCII compatible > String instead of just a String in the source Encoding, right? Yes, and if you set Regexp::FIXEDENCODING the regexp will match only the same encoding. P.S. If you write about regexp, the difference of /i and character class between Unicode and non-Unicode may be a topic. -- NARUSE, Yui <naruse@airemix.jp>