[#7476] Net::HTTP Bug in Ruby 1.8.4? — James Edward Gray II <james@...>
Can a Net::HTTP guru comment on this message:
[#7485] Bugzilla for ruby? — Hadmut Danisch <hadmut@...>
Hi,
[#7493] how to introduce reference objects into ruby — "Geert Fannes" <Geert.Fannes@...>
Hello,
[#7497] Re: how to introduce reference objects into ruby — "Geert Fannes" <Geert.Fannes@...>
Hello,
[#7500] Re: how to introduce reference objects into ruby — "Geert Fannes" <Geert.Fannes@...>
The problem with the code you sent is that you have to go through ALL
The columns store the actual values (doubles), and the rows store pointers to the corresponding doubles. This way, I can update a double directly via the columns, via the rows after dereferencing the pointers.
[#7518] Proposal: String#notempty? — Bertram Scharpf <lists@...>
Hi,
[#7524] Sefe level: bug or feature? — "Kirill A. Shutemov" <k.shutemov@...>
Why cannot do eval with $SAFE=3 and can with $SAFE=4? Is it bug or
Hi,
On Mon, 13 Mar 2006, Yukihiro Matsumoto wrote:
[#7529] Re: Proposal: String#notempty? — "Berger, Daniel" <Daniel.Berger@...>
> -----Original Message-----
[#7546] Re: how to introduce reference objects into ruby — "Geert Fannes" <Geert.Fannes@...>
In Ruby, there's the []= and [] operators which you can define together.
[#7553] "not" operator used in expression that is a method parameter can generate syntax error — noreply@...
Bugs item #3843, was opened at 2006-03-15 22:09
Hi,
Nobu, you are not answering to the question.... You have to unveil why
Hi,
Hello,
Zev Blut wrote:
On 3/16/06, Joel VanderWerf <vjoel@path.berkeley.edu> wrote:
On 3/16/06, Zev Blut <rubyzbibd@ubit.com> wrote:
Hello,
Yukihiro Matsumoto wrote:
On 3/16/06, mathew <meta@pobox.com> wrote:
Brian Mitchell wrote:
On 3/16/06, mathew <meta@pobox.com> wrote:
Dear all
What you've described is the basic predence difference between
Evan Phoenix wrote:
[#7600] ruby_script ? — "Nicolas Despr鑚" <nicolas.despres@...>
Hi list,
>>>>> "N" == Nicolas Despr=E8s?= <ISO-8859-1> writes:
On 3/25/06, ts <decoux@moulon.inra.fr> wrote:
>>>>> "N" == Nicolas Despr=E8s?= <ISO-8859-1> writes:
[#7601] to_str, to_s and StringValue — "Gerardo Santana Gez Garrido" <gerardo.santana@...>
If I understand correctly, StringValue is a way for writing duck-type
[#7614] PATCH: A subclassable Pathname — "Evan Phoenix" <evanwebb@...>
A simply change (changing all references of "Pathname.new" to
In article <92f5f81d0603262350k796fe48fp2224b9f2108ac507@mail.gmail.com>,
Quite right on the .glob and .getwd. I guess the tests don't test hit
In article <92f5f81d0603270903g2fb02244i6a395be708dfffa3@mail.gmail.com>,
In article <87fyl3x0wd.fsf@m17n.org>,
Hm, well, thats because of the shortcut behavior in Pathname#+ which
In article <92f5f81d0603271717r1ce51d30p6c28e363dc32a09b@mail.gmail.com>,
Re: [PATCH] async thread wakeup
Hi, From: "Joshua Haberman" <joshua@reverberate.org> > > I emailed ruby-core about this a while back, but got no response, so > here is a patch to make my question more concrete. > > This patch adds a hook into the thread scheduler that extensions can > use to wake up a thread asynchronously. It is a function you can > safely call from any thread. It will mark the thread runnable, so > that the thread scheduler will consider running it the next time around. I would love to be able to wake up a Ruby thread from some other operating system thread. In my situation, I didn't think just marking the thread as runnable would do the job, since Ruby's OS-thread is likely waiting in select() and wouldn't notice the change until it returned from the system call. Is this not an issue for you? Curious, Bill