[#56333] [CommonRuby - Feature #8723][Open] Array.any? predicate returns true for empty array. — "nurettin (Nurettin Onur TUGCU)" <onurtugcu@...>

12 messages 2013/08/02

[#56368] [ruby-trunk - Bug #8730][Open] "rescue Exception" rescues Timeout::ExitException — "takiuchi (Genki Takiuchi)" <genki@...21g.com>

15 messages 2013/08/04

[#56407] [ruby-trunk - misc #8741][Open] email notification on bugs.ruby-lang.org is broken — "rits (First Last)" <redmine@...>

18 messages 2013/08/05

[#56524] [ruby-trunk - Bug #8770][Open] [PATCH] process.c: avoid EINTR from Process.spawn — "normalperson (Eric Wong)" <normalperson@...>

19 messages 2013/08/10

[#56536] [ruby-trunk - Feature #8772][Open] Hash alias #| merge, and the case for Hash and Array polymorphism — "trans (Thomas Sawyer)" <redmine@...>

24 messages 2013/08/11

[#56544] [ruby-trunk - Bug #8774][Open] rb_file_dirname return wrong encoding string when dir is "." — jiayp@... (贾 延平) <jiayp@...>

10 messages 2013/08/11

[#56569] [ruby-trunk - Feature #8781][Open] Use require_relative() instead of require() if possible — "ko1 (Koichi Sasada)" <redmine@...>

31 messages 2013/08/12
[#56582] [ruby-trunk - Feature #8781] Use require_relative() instead of require() if possible — "drbrain (Eric Hodel)" <drbrain@...7.net> 2013/08/12

[#56584] Re: [ruby-trunk - Feature #8781] Use require_relative() instead of require() if possible — SASADA Koichi <ko1@...> 2013/08/12

(2013/08/13 2:25), drbrain (Eric Hodel) wrote:

[#56636] Re: [ruby-trunk - Feature #8781] Use require_relative() instead of require() if possible — Aaron Patterson <tenderlove@...> 2013/08/16

On Tue, Aug 13, 2013 at 07:38:01AM +0900, SASADA Koichi wrote:

[#56634] [ruby-trunk - Feature #8788][Open] use eventfd on newer Linux instead of pipe for timer thread — "normalperson (Eric Wong)" <normalperson@...>

11 messages 2013/08/16

[#56648] [ruby-trunk - Bug #8795][Open] "Null byte in string error" on Marshal.load — "mml (McClain Looney)" <m@...>

17 messages 2013/08/16

[#56824] [ruby-trunk - Feature #8823][Open] Run trap handler in an independent thread called "Signal thread" — "ko1 (Koichi Sasada)" <redmine@...>

14 messages 2013/08/27

[#56878] [ruby-trunk - misc #8835][Open] Introducing a semantic versioning scheme and branching policy — "knu (Akinori MUSHA)" <knu@...>

11 messages 2013/08/30

[#56890] [ruby-trunk - Feature #8839][Open] Class and module should return the class or module that was opened — "headius (Charles Nutter)" <headius@...>

26 messages 2013/08/30

[#56894] [ruby-trunk - Feature #8840][Open] Yielder#state — "marcandre (Marc-Andre Lafortune)" <ruby-core@...>

14 messages 2013/08/30

[ruby-core:56903] [ruby-trunk - Bug #8842] Integer#[] with range

From: "mame (Yusuke Endoh)" <mame@...>
Date: 2013-08-31 02:47:34 UTC
List: ruby-core #56903
Issue #8842 has been updated by mame (Yusuke Endoh).

File integer-with-range.pdf added


----------------------------------------
Bug #8842: Integer#[] with range
https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/8842#change-41451

Author: mame (Yusuke Endoh)
Status: Assigned
Priority: Normal
Assignee: matz (Yukihiro Matsumoto)
Category: 
Target version: next minor
ruby -v: trunk
Backport: 1.9.3: UNKNOWN, 2.0.0: UNKNOWN


=begin
I propose to extend Integer#[] accepting a range.

    0b01001101[2, 4] == 0b0011
    0bHGFEDCBA[2, 4] == 0bFEDC

== Use case

I believe that everyone has written a code like this:

    if (n >> 2) & 0xf == 0x3
      ...
    end

because this is a very common idiom in C.
But it is less readable, writable, extendable and optimizable.

    if n[2, 4] == 0x3
      ...
    end

is much better in the all aspects.

== Corner cases

The current Integer#[] (and shift operators) handle an integer as "a bit array with infinity length";
it returns 0 for any negative index and an (extended) sign bit for any index greater than MSB.
We also can use this standard to define the spec for a range argument.
For example:

    15[-1, 42] #=> 30  (equivalent to (15 << 1) && (2 ** 42 - 1))
    15[3, 42]  #=>  1  (equivalent to (15 >> 3) && (2 ** 42 - 1))
    15[3..Float::INFINITY]  #=> 1  (equivalent to 15 >> 3)
    15[-3..Float::INFINITY] #=> 2  (equivalent to 1 << 3)

    -1[0..Float::INFINITY]   #=> -1
    -1[1..Float::INFINITY]   #=> -1
    -1[-1..Float::INFINITY]  #=> -2

    1[-Float::INFINITY..0] #=> failed to allocate memory
    2[-Float::INFINITY..0] #=> 0


Only tricky case that I thought of is a range (beg..end) whose "end" is smaller than "beg".
I think it should be handled as (beg..Float::INFINITY).

    15[-3..-4] #=> 2  (equivalent to 1 << 3)
    -1[0..-1] #=> -1
    -1[0..-2] #=> -1

What do you think?
=end



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