From: duerst@... Date: 2014-10-28T08:33:17+00:00 Subject: [ruby-core:65938] [CommonRuby - Feature #8848] Syntax for binary strings Issue #8848 has been updated by Martin D��rst. Eric Wong wrote: > We can even go farther than #10423 and move the evaluation of > "string literal".{b,encode,force_encoding} to compile time. > > The downside is compatibility with people who wish to override one of > those methods, but doubt anybody overrides those... Even if nobody overrides String#encode, they may configure it in various ways. > There's no new (and strange looking, IMHO) syntax to learn, > it looks like a normal method call, and the optimization would be > usable with existing code. It's not enough to move evaluation to compile time. We may want to know the desired encoding before we start to parse the string. That by definition doesn't work when the method (or whatever) comes after the end of the literal. ---------------------------------------- Feature #8848: Syntax for binary strings https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/8848#change-49676 * Author: Martin D��rst * Status: Open * Priority: Normal * Assignee: * Category: * Target version: ---------------------------------------- In commit 37486, Yui (Naruse) added a String#b method as proposed in http://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/6767. String#b was added to allow easy generation of binary strings; this became necessary in particular after the source file encoding was changed to UTF-8. However, as also recognized in http://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/6767, in the long term (ideally starting with Ruby 2.1) it would be better to make binary strings available as part of Ruby syntax. One reason for this efficiency. String#b creates a duplicate object, which is not at all necessary for the frequent use case of String literals. Another reason is encoding validity. To be able to e.g. create a "\xFF" binary string, with String#b in an UTF-8 source context, it is necessary to allow "\xFF" (temporarily at least) as an (actually invalid) UTF-8 string. This may be difficult for some implementations, and isn't desirable in general. Regarding syntax, there are mainly two solutions: 1) a '%b' prefix 2) a 'b' suffix The preferable syntax depends on the overall future approach of Ruby to String literal suffixes (see https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/8579). -- https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/