[#57185] Cipher book for ruby — Shannon Fang <xrfang@...>
Hi all ruby gurus there,
Hi --
[#57196] Symbols and tainting — Tim Bates <tim@...>
I notice that calling String#intern on a tainted string returns an untainted
[#57198] ANN: MiniRubyWiki has struck again — Phlip <phlipcpp@...>
Rubies:
>
[#57228] What do some of Ruby's symbols mean? — "Gavin Sinclair" <gsinclair@...>
This could do with some community input before going to the FAQ. The format
Hello,
Hi --
Hi David
----- Original Message -----
>>>>> "H" == Hal E Fulton <hal9000@hypermetrics.com> writes:
On Mon, Dec 02, 2002 at 02:19:46AM +0900, ts wrote:
>>>>> "M" == Mauricio Fern疣dez <Mauricio> writes:
>>>>> "S" == Shannon Fang <xrfang@hotmail.com> writes:
[#57245] pickaxe — Shannon Fang <xrfang@...>
I kept hearing you guys talking about pickaxe, I tried to search it in
[#57246] [Revised] What do some of Ruby's symbols mean? — "Gavin Sinclair" <gsinclair@...>
Thanks for the instant feedback. And apologies for the offensive late-night
[#57278] WIN32OLE — Shannon Fang <xrfang@...>
Hi,
[#57300] Help with mod_ruby and eruby — "Useko Netsumi" <usenets@...>
I did create the .rbx and .rhtml as instructed but it does not seem to work.
[#57309] For statements — Daniel Carrera <dcarrera@...>
Hi,
[#57337] Memory consumption problem with recursion — squidster@... (Squidster)
Fellow Rubyists/Rubyians/Rubyans,
[#57349] [Revised again] What are the non-alphanumerical symbols in Ruby code? — "Gavin Sinclair" <gsinclair@...>
Folks,
In article <04af01c299e6$e35ebdc0$d44532d2@nosedog>, Gavin Sinclair wrote:
[#57380] Ruby Book for People Who Aren't (Yet) Programmers — "Chris" <nemo@...>
Hello,
Oh, my, what have I begun? :)
[#57403] Newsgroup — Daniel Carrera <dcarrera@...>
Hello,
In addition, this mailing list is a mirror of the newsgroup, so there's no
Ruby Book for People Who Aren't (Yet) Programmers
On Tue, Dec 03, 2002 at 04:50:10AM +0900, Daniel Carrera wrote:
> You might already have received it by now. Get used to receiving the
> I heard a little while back that there might be a Ruby book in the works for
Daniel Carrera <dcarrera@math.umd.edu> wrote:
> Perhaps you should introduce IRB right at the beginning, so that people
Hi --
David A. Black <dblack@superlink.net> wrote:
[#57448] LoadError -> `require': (null) - /usr/local/lib/ruby/1.6/i686-linux/sqlite.so (LoadError) — ahoward <ahoward@...>
[#57487] Conditional block operations — "Roman Rytov" <rrytov@...>
Is there a way to filter results of EACH or COLLECT functions? Let's say
[#57511] Re: exception types — "Shannon Fang" <xrfang@...>
Hi,
[#57551] Re: Fox threading issues — David Naseby <david.naseby@...>
The program shows the Linux like behaviour on Windows for me (locking up). I
I'm attempting to create a file within a directory
[#57557] Re: Ruby Book for People Who Aren't (Yet) Programmers — Mike Campbell <mike.campbell@...1.com>
>> Perhaps you should introduce...
On Wed, Dec 04, 2002 at 09:02:32AM +0900, Mike Campbell wrote:
On Wed, Dec 04, 2002 at 06:40:54PM +0900, Mauricio Fern疣dez wrote:
[#57587] Wiki recommendation — "Ted" <ted@...>
I'm planning to set up a wiki for non-technical users. Is there one that is of good report and comes well-recommended?
[#57588] about miniruby — simonced@...
[#57598] Class variables problem — Peter Hickman <peter@...>
I have used
[#57693] Re: elseif? — Shannon Fang <xrfang@...>
Well easy to learn and easy to read is most important reason I like ruby.
[#57694] Re: Ruby Book for People Who Aren't (Yet) Programmers — "Bill Kelly" <billk@...>
Hi,
Did you do multi-line statements in BASIC interactively? Like loops?
[#57717] Re: Enumerable#map_with_indices (was Re: Conditional block operations) — dblack@...
Hi --
[#57732] Re: Ruby Book for People Who Aren't (Yet) Programmers — Harry Ohlsen <harryo@...>
> I hate to say this but the _Windows_ irb (at least the one packaged with
[#57733] Re: Ruby Book for People Who Aren't (Yet) Programmers — Harry Ohlsen <harryo@...>
On Thu, 5 Dec 2002 09:22, Daniel Carrera wrote:
From: "Chris Pine" <nemo@hellotree.com>
[#57735] Re: elseif? — "Shannon Fang" <xrfang@...>
How about a vote? I vote to add elseif as an alternative... Least
> How about a vote? I vote to add elseif as an alternative... Least
Daniel Carrera wrote:
> Seems like adding an 'elseif' alias is a simple and
[#57756] install.rb — Daniel Carrera <dcarrera@...>
Could someone tell me how the Ruby 'install.rb' scripts work?
>>>>> "D" == Daniel Carrera <dcarrera@math.umd.edu> writes:
[#57769] Matz's slides — Dalibor Sramek <dali@...>
Hi.
[#57791] Re: Best way to read data? — christopher.j.meisenzahl@...
Bill,
[#57793] Re: Ruby Book for People Who Aren't (Yet) Programmers — Carlos <angus@...>
> Here's what I consider to be one of the last programs before variables are
[#57794] Re: Ruby Book for People Who Aren't (Yet) Programmers — dblack@...
Hi --
----- Original Message -----
[#57816] ratlast 0.1 -- embedded FORTH in Ruby — Mark Probert <probertm@...>
In article <5.1.0.14.2.20021205171651.021cce20@zcard04k.ca.nortel.com>,
[#57826] Re: elseif? — "Ted" <ted@...>
Yuk! Ruby was presented to me as a 'clean' language.
----- Original Message -----
----- Original Message -----
[#57833] on error resume next — Shannon Fang <xrfang@...>
Hi,
Put the code you want to be executed in ensure:
Hi,
Hi,
[#57844] CGI.escape - doesn't — ahoward <ahoward@...>
ahoward (ahoward@fsl.noaa.gov) wrote:
On Friday 06 December 2002 03:20 am, Eric Hodel wrote:
On Fri, 6 Dec 2002 18:45:44 +0900, Bruce Williams wrote:
[#57856] Buffered output on Windows — "Chris Pine" <nemo@...>
Quick question:
----- Original Message -----
[#57863] Re: elseif? — "Ted" <ted@...>
I find that vim does better brace matching with {}.
[#57883] Regexp imxo - does 'x' work? — ahoward <ahoward@...>
Hi --
[#57927] Printing subclasses — ted <ted@...>
Can Ruby print the subclasses of a given class? Like the reverse of the
[#57928] ML archive — "Shashank Date" <sdate@...>
Is there any place where this ML is archived so that we can download archive
[#57949] Re : PocketRuby for HP Jornada 820 (WinCe v 2.11, StrongArm processor) — "Simon Cedric" <simoncedruby@...>
I also have the same problem.
[#57968] Class-instance variables access — Francois GORET <fg@...>
Hi,
> I try to understand the difference between 'class variables' and 'class
[#57970] on error resume next — "Shannon Fang" <xrfang@...>
Hi all rubyists,
[#57992] irb aborts in 1.7.3 on Solaris — Jim Freeze <jim@...>
Hi:
[#58024] ?? weirdness in Find.find/lstat ?? — ahoward <ahoward@...>
[#58033] Ruby script with cvs invocations on Win — "Robert" <bob.news@...>
[#58037] Is it possible to convert a proc object or block to a string of Ruby code? — Michael Davis <mdavis@...>
Is it possible to convert a proc object or block to a string of Ruby code?
Matz does not hold the source code in memory so...no you cannot (unless
[#58041] File — Daniel Carrera <dcarrera@...>
[#58049] YA ++ explanation — "Mills Thomas (app1tam)" <app1tam@...>
I've worked it out in my mind why ++ isn't valid. Maybe my thoughts will
[#58071] StringIO (was: Namespaces (was: protected program in a program)) — "Chris Pine" <nemo@...>
Check this out!
[#58093] Thank God for backups — Daniel Carrera <dcarrera@...>
I was working on the tutorial just now and wanted to delete all the *~
In article <3DF21343.3060607@icqmail.com>, David Garamond wrote:
From: "Daniel Carrera" <dcarrera@math.umd.edu>
> alias rm='rm -i'
From: "Ibraheem Umaru-Mohammed" <umarumohammed@btinternet.com>
Scripsit ille Rudolf Polzer <AntiATField_adsgohere@durchnull.de>:
[#58099] Accessor for trace_func — <nathaniel@...>
Robert Feldt actually requested this back in ruby-talk:11158, but
I think this proposed RCR is a good idea. It allows trace funcs to be
[#58113] Re: elseif? — "Pe, Botp" <botp@...>
Hi David (aka dblack@candle.superlink.net
[#58122] regexp: zero-width match for PRECEDING atom — Emmanuel Touzery <emmanuel.touzery@...>
Hello,
[#58145] Newbie tutorial - if statements — Daniel Carrera <dcarrera@...>
[#58163] Re: Newbie tutorial - if statements — "Chris Pine" <nemo@...>
[#58178] eRuby — Daniel Carrera <dcarrera@...>
Hello,
[#58188] The Ruby Way — Daniel Carrera <dcarrera@...>
What do people think of "The Ruby Way"?
On Sun, 8 Dec 2002 14:39, Daniel Carrera wrote:
I bought it a couple of days ago. I've been working my way through it
I'm just getting started on Ruby. Would you recommend I wait a while
[#58199] Ruminations... — "Ted" <ted@...>
I was looking at "Ruby in a Nutshell" on Amazon's site and came across this in the Introduction on page 3:
[#58205] Emacs — Daniel Carrera <dcarrera@...>
Hello,
Hi --
> 'Tis on your machine already :-) Look in the 'misc' subdirectory of
[#58214] Re: The Ruby Way — "Roman Rytov" <rrytov@...>
After all excited opinions regarding this book, that I agree with, I'd
From: "Roman Rytov" <rrytov@entopia.com>
[#58267] multi-dimension array — Shannon Fang <xrfang@...>
Hi there,
[#58299] -yet another (ruby) newbie question -string#concat — "Pe, Botp" <botp@...>
Hello Ruby Friends,
Hi --
[#58334] - how to create/modify []= — "Pe, Botp" <botp@...>
Hi Ruby friends,
[#58336] Re: multi-dimension array — "Shannon Fang" <xrfang@...>
Hi Guru,
[#58353] XMI... — Daniel Nicault <daniel.nicault@...>
Hi,
[#58355] Ruby in magazines? — christopher.j.meisenzahl@...
[#58364] Fix the time/date on your computers please. — montana <montana@...99.bsd.st>
Seems there are a bunch of folks mailing this list with incorrect dates set on their computer. I got ~ 100+ emails dated back to 1970 from this list and since my email is set to read them by date received, I had to return to the begining of my mail file to find them. I do not knoe if it is the mailserver doing this or the people sending the mail, but it would be nice if the problem was fixed.
[#58371] Redirect IO to String? — "Lind, Juergen" <Juergen.Lind@...>
Hi folks,
[#58376] Getting the latest file — bobx@... (Bob)
===
[#58380] irb Abort on Solaris Backtrace — Jim Freeze <jim@...>
Hi:
On Wednesday, 11 December 2002 at 8:11:18 +0900, Jim Freeze wrote:
>>>>> "J" == Jim Freeze <jim@freeze.org> writes:
[#58385] Environment variables — Maur兤io <briqueabraque@...>
Hi,
[#58394] Ruby BUG when using PStore and fork — Jeremy Henty <jeremy@...>
PStore does not appear to play well with fork. This script
[#58417] raa-install on Win32 — "Hal E. Fulton" <hal9000@...>
Hello...
[#58437] P.S. (Re: [RCR] Accessor for trace_func) — "Brian Wisti" <brian@...>
>
[#58438] warnings -w — Daniel Carrera <dcarrera@...>
Hello,
Hi,
> It sets $VERBOSE to true, and gives you extra warnings on parsing.
> |Thanks. Can you give me an example of a parsing warning that it would
Hi,
> Oops, how about
Hi,
> It reminds me http://ruby-talk.com/12896
[#58458] mac os x eruby — Tom Sawyer <transami@...>
hi all, transami here. not that anyone has probably given it much thought, but
[#58473] Problems transporting nil values using XMLRPC (net/http ?) — Martin Hart <martin@...>
Hi,
[#58475] 8x8 matrix — "Sebastian Ruhs" <RembrandtAkaDodger@...>
Is there an easier way to create a 8x8 matrix then:
[#58479] Pymacs in ruby? — "Mike Campbell" <michael_s_campbell@...>
This is probably way, way OT, but has anyone considered something along the
----- Original Message -----
I'm attempting to create a vertical, single-column
Jason Persampieri wrote:
[#58497] Ruby Question — geoflorida2000@... (George)
I want to write command line Ruby program whose arguments will be a
[#58514] Seeking Ruby Samadhi — jsuntheimer@... (Jake)
Hi all,
[#58537] Re: FXRuby : Setting Default Height/Width in an FXList — David Naseby <david.naseby@...>
>-----Original Message-----
David Naseby wrote:
--- Lyle Johnson <lyle@users.sourceforge.net> wrote:
Jason Persampieri wrote:
[#58543] Re: Proper Type for Dollar Amount — "Pe, Botp" <botp@...>
Hi Mark (aka Mark Probert [mailto:probertm@nortelnetworks.com]):
Mark Probert (probertm@nortelnetworks.com) wrote:
On Thu, Dec 12, 2002 at 04:03:25AM +0900, Eric Hodel wrote:
Actually, the meter has been redefined to be 1/299,792,458th of the
[#58545] Jabber layer for dRuby? — ptkwt@...1.aracnet.com (Phil Tomson)
Maybe it was at RubyConf, but I think I recall someone mentioning that
[#58546] Using amrita for generating static content? — Lloyd Zusman <ljz@...>
I'm a very happy user of amrita for generating dynamic web content. My
[#58563] replacing chars in string — "Shashank Date" <sdate@...>
I am trying to globally replace characters in a string by "chaining" the
[#58566] all the pretty evals... — "Chris Pine" <nemo@...>
So, I've been kind of confused about all of the different ways of evaling
[#58576] st_lookup problem with sockets on ppc — Dave Thomas <dave@...>
ruby -v
[#58597] calling a perl script — max <max@...>
hi
In article <newscache$1ymy6h$gu9$1@news.sil.at>,
[#58598] String.scan (Regexp again...) — "Shannon Fang" <xrfang@...>
Hi gurus,
[#58637] JRuby — "Shannon Fang" <xrfang@...>
Hi,
[#58640] Strainge Time Behaviour — whitton@... (Travis Whitton)
I'm manipulating some dates, and I just found something weird.
[#58653] deleting a class — "Chris Pine" <nemo@...>
Hello,
[#58657] functional programming "style" — "zesar" <i_wont@...>
i discovered ruby some weeks ago and i have to say now that i'm through with
[#58662] Re: The coolest thing since sliced bread — "Garriss, Michael" <Michael.Garriss@...>
Ugh! Free write forces users into a new editor? I'm lost without Vim.
Garriss, Michael wrote:
Iain 'Spoon' Truskett <spoon@dellah.org> wrote:
* Martin DeMello (martindemello@yahoo.com) [12 Dec 2002 11:03]:
[#58677] help -- persuade my boss to adopt ruby — Shannon Fang <xrfang@...>
Hi Ruby Lovers,
In article <20021211201110.F0B9.XRFANG@hotmail.com>,
In article <at893n02fn8@enews4.newsguy.com>,
[#58689] Re: [ANN] jabber4r 0.3.0 (doesn't work with raa-install) — ptkwt@...1.aracnet.com (Phil Tomson)
In article <20021211171825.GA2345@localhost.localdomain>,
Tom Clarke (tom@u2i.com) wrote:
[#58690] Re: The coolest thing since sliced bread — "Garriss, Michael" <Michael.Garriss@...>
Hmm.....
[#58718] How to detect Module Inclusion for Class Instances (like Module#extend_object)? — Martin Hart <martin@...>
[#58724] Problem loading extensions in OSX 10.2.2 — Dave Thomas <Dave@...>
Hi,
On Thursday, 12 December 2002 at 9:31:39 +0900, Dave Thomas wrote:
[#58730] Re: do I really not understand inheritance?? — "Chris Pine" <nemo@...>
AHA!!!
Hi --
Hmm.... I see what you're saying, I think. I was going to give you a
Hi --
Now that's interesting...
I don't understand all of this discussion, but the following may be
[#58738] Re: help -- persuade my boss to adopt ruby — "Ted" <ted@...>
Dang! Ugly American idioms...
My advice:
hi Russ,
OK, to fix a threading problem, I upgraded to Ruby
Hi,
[#58786] Ruby tutorial - update — Daniel Carrera <dcarrera@...>
Hello everyone,
[#58804] Re: help -- persuade my boss to adopt ruby — "Shannon Fang" <xrfang@...>
>it's the MATZ'S position that Ruby will never be REAL WORLD language.
Hello Dan,
At 3:09 PM +0900 12/17/02, Bulat Ziganshin wrote:
The problem lies in the fact that these statements are equal:
On Tue, 17 Dec 2002 16:49:47 +0900, Rich wrote:
From: "Dan Sugalski" <dan@sidhe.org>
From: "Nikodemus Siivola" <tsiivola@cc.hut.fi>
I think matz's thoughts on the direction of Ruby are articulated here:
Hi --
----- Original Message -----
Hello Hal,
Hi,
At 3:36 PM +0900 12/16/02, Bulat Ziganshin wrote:
Mark Probert wrote:
On Sun, 2002-12-15 at 19:45, Hal E. Fulton wrote:
On Mon, 16 Dec 2002 11:46:25 +0900, W. Kent Starr wrote:
On Mon, 16 Dec 2002 21:58:26 +0900, Russ Freeman wrote:
> an object model is an *instance* of a data model for a particular
W. Kent Starr wrote:
Hello Peter,
[#58861] need advice for parsing directories .ftp. — AW <sturmpanzer@...>
Hi, Im currently working on a script that logs into an ftp server and
[#58866] require — Maur兤io <briqueabraque@...>
Guys,
[#58870] replace setup.rb/install.rb with builtin module — ptkwt@...1.aracnet.com (Phil Tomson)
I proposed this idea last night on the tail-end of another thread and on
[#58879] Re: [RCR] Global Regexp Match Mechanism (//g) — "Austin Ziegler" <austin@...>
#scan doesn't solve the ultimate problem -- being able to backtrack and rescan from an earlier position (a la Perl's pos() function). Scan would work "OK" if it returned an array of MatchData instead of Strings. BTW, my posted code almost works. I meant to say that I wanted to do that without doing "foostr = md.post_match".
Hi,
nobu.nokada@softhome.net writes:
Hi,
[#58890] Re: help -- persuade my boss to adopt ruby — GBanschbach@...
[#58913] Inheritance Question — Jim Freeze <jim@...>
Hi
From: "Jim Freeze" <jim@freeze.org>
On Fri, 13 Dec 2002, Gavin Sinclair wrote:
From: "Jim Freeze" <jim@freeze.org>
From: "Jim Freeze" <jim@freeze.org>
On Friday, 13 December 2002 at 15:45:27 +0900, Gavin Sinclair wrote:
>>>>> "J" == Jim Freeze <jim@freeze.org> writes:
>>>>> "a" == ahoward <ahoward@fsl.noaa.gov> writes:
On Sat, 14 Dec 2002, ts wrote:
>>>>> "a" == ahoward <ahoward@fsl.noaa.gov> writes:
On Sat, 14 Dec 2002, ts wrote:
>>>>> "a" == ahoward <ahoward@fsl.noaa.gov> writes:
[#58970] ENV['HOME'] on win32 — "Jake" <jsuntheimer@...>
What is the connical workaround for the absense of the HOME variable on the
[#58984] TCP Server — "Shannon Fang" <xrfang@...>
Hi,
[#58989] Splitomania - advice welcome — Anders Engstr <aengstrom@...>
Hi.
[#58999] Can an .rbx file send it's own code? — "Chris Pine" <nemo@...>
Hello,
[#59030] Ruby slow?? — "Garriss, Michael" <Michael.Garriss@...>
Found this site about how languages stack up against each other. This test
[#59035] ruby core dump (1.6.8 on FreeBSD) — Brad Hilton <bhilton@...>
I have found a reproducible code snippet which causes a ruby core dump. It
>>>>> "B" == Brad Hilton <bhilton@vpop.net> writes:
On Sunday 15 December 2002 6:09 am, ts wrote:
Hi,
I have subclassed FXTreeItem (MyTreeItem) and built a
Jason Persampieri wrote:
Ahhh... always one step ahead of me, aren't ya?
[#59036] Re: Ruby slow?? — "lyle@..." <lyle@...>
yes, ruby is often slower than other languages, but that is simply the price
Tom Sawyer <transami@transami.net> writes:
[#59051] Re: [RCR] Global Regexp Match Mechanism (//g) — "Austin Ziegler" <austin@...>
Okay; since 90% of what we need is present, why not add a new method to Regexp, #gmatch(str, pos = nil, flags = nil). Adding pos to #match seems a poor fit because of the flags argument already present. Also, if a MatchData is passed as str, it should implicitly call MatchData#end for pos unless pos is non-nil. IMO, being explicit about doing a //g-type match is a Good Thing.
[#59080] Is it wise to extend Matrix? — "Gavin Sinclair" <gsinclair@...>
Since the thread "Inheritance question" has become so deep (physically :) and
On Saturday, 14 December 2002 at 22:36:11 +0900, Gavin Sinclair wrote:
>>>>> "J" == Jim Freeze <jim@freeze.org> writes:
[#59108] un-extending objects — dblack@...
Hi --
>>>>> "d" == dblack <dblack@candle.superlink.net> writes:
[#59111] Ruby zlib on 1.7.3/W2k - uncompressing value from http get — Jeff Schilling <jeff@...>
I am using the PragProg 1.7.3 distro of ruby which includes zlib 0.5.1
[#59131] strange DB problem — Shannon Fang <xrfang@...>
Hi,
[#59172] Ruby in Bioinformatics — ptkwt@...1.aracnet.com (Phil Tomson)
I'm looking into getting into Bioinformatics (hey, there seem to be some
[#59174] Toward ruby-lang.org renewal; trial website offered — matz@... (Yukihiro Matsumoto)
Hi,
In article <1040016368.023015.27793.nullmailer@picachu.netlab.jp>,
On Mon, 16 Dec 2002 14:26:19 +0900, Yukihiro Matsumoto <matz@ruby-lang.org> wrote:
On Mon, 16 Dec 2002 08:11 pm, Trevor Jenkins wrote:
Hi, all,
[#59176] Matz's LL2 Video Available — Alain Hoang <hoanga@...>
Hello Ruby folk,
[#59180] Exception handling — "Aleksei Guzev" <aleksei.guzev@...>
Good day!
[#59191] Sandboxing and threading — Tim Bates <tim@...>
Dear all,
[#59208] Re: Toward ruby-lang.org renewal; trial website offered — "Pe, Botp" <botp@...>
Trevor.Jenkins@suneidesis.com commented:
[#59223] any japanese books being translated to english ?? — Markus Jais <mjais@...>
hello
[#59257] Deep copy in Rub? — christopher.j.meisenzahl@...
Matt Armstrong wrote:
Hello Kent,
[#59276] How to return value from middle of a block? — Jim Freeze <jim@...>
Hi:
[#59297] dialup connection — "Gustav G." <gaga6@...>
Hi there,
[#59302] standard accessor for List attribute — ddet@... (Det)
Hello everyone,
[#59324] code review — "Davide Varvello" <D.Varvello@...>
Hi All,
[#59330] Does rdoc generate line numbers? — Jim Freeze <jim@...>
Hi:
On Tue, 2002-12-17 at 07:39, Jim Freeze wrote:
[#59343] OT: Functional Language Recommendation — Wai-Sun Chia <waisun.chia@...>
Sorry for the OT post, but I need some advise from some like-minded
Wai-Sun Chia <waisun.chia@hp.com> writes:
[#59374] Ruby instead of PHP? — "Dominik Werder" <d.werder@...>
Hi there,
[#59382] Re: Confessions of a Ruby programmer — "Shannon Fang" <xrfang@...>
It is surely inspiring to hear this. I am now actively "alluring" friends to
[#59392] Re: [OT] RE: help -- persuade my boss to adopt ruby — "Austin Ziegler" <austin@...>
> Ok, I confess: I know nothing about data
>It is a confusing term, so I'll do my best
On Wed, 18 Dec 2002 09:43:51 +0900, Russ Freeman wrote:
[#59400] named parameters — Daniel Carrera <dcarrera@...>
Is there a way to write a function with named parameters?
[#59449] Regex#=== with non-string argument — Joel VanderWerf <vjoel@...>
[#59488] Hash.new{...} bug? — "Bulat Ziganshin" <bulatz@...>
Hello ruby-talk,
[#59491] Why a compiled Ruby? — christopher.j.meisenzahl@...
[#59496] automating script for a command line utility — "Shashank Date" <sdate@...>
I am trying to automate an interactive DOS command line utility (something
[#59508] ANN: FXRuby-1.0.17 Now Available — Lyle Johnson <lyle@...>
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
On Thursday, 19 December 2002 at 2:51:08 +0900, Lyle Johnson wrote:
Jim Freeze wrote:
On Thursday, 19 December 2002 at 7:11:59 +0900, Lyle Johnson wrote:
Jim Freeze wrote:
Hi Lyle,
I upgraded yesterday to Mac OS X 10.2.3 and to Ruby 1.6.8 preview 4
Mark Wilson wrote:
I got FXRuby-1.0.17 installed. When I try to use it I get the
[#59509] Mommy, where do methods come from? — "Chris Pine" <nemo@...>
(Sorry for the subject; couldn't help myself! :)
[#59517] Re: Confessions of a Ruby programmer — "Shannon Fang" <xrfang@...>
Hi,
[#59563] Socket problem — Child <child@...9.ds.pwr.wroc.pl>
Hello
Hi,
In article <200212190343.gBJ3hZb22278@sharui.nakada.kanuma.tochigi.jp>,
[#59564] Test::Unit 0.1.5 — <nathaniel@...>
What with all the holiday cheer going around (who can't be cheerful with
nathaniel@NOSPAMtalbott.ws wrote:
Lyle Johnson [mailto:lyle@users.sourceforge.net] wrote:
----- Original Message -----
Hal E. Fulton [mailto:hal9000@hypermetrics.com] wrote:
----- Original Message -----
From: "Hal E. Fulton" <hal9000@hypermetrics.com>
[#59569] How to include some text and exclude other in one regular expression? — Usano <usano@...>
I would like to match "file 1 of 2" or "1 of 2", but not "day 1 of 2".
[#59590] Few question about IO — Radek Hnilica <Radek@...>
Hello,
On Thu, 19 Dec 2002, Radek Hnilica wrote:
[#59598] Re: [ANN] ByteCodeRuby 0.1.3 — "Shannon Fang" <xrfang@...>
Hi,
[#59602] ruby-1.6.8-preview4 compile fails in ncurses — Jeremy Henty <jeremy@...>
Compiling ruby-1.6.8-preview fails with lots of undefined references
[#59606] sleeping threads — Jonas Hoffmann <ruby@...>
Hello,
[#59607] unix and windows {Re: [ANN] ByteCodeRuby 0.1.3} — "Shannon Fang" <xrfang@...>
Hi,
[#59619] ANN: MiniRubyWiki does NerveCenter, WikiStyleSheet, Minor Edits — Phlip <phlipcpp@...>
Rubies:
[#59654] determing defined constants for a class — Robert McGovern <tarasis@...>
From looking at the docs I can see that it is possible to determine
[#59670] msys w/ FXRuby — Norman Su <normsu@...>
Hi, I'm currently trying to compile FXRuby 1.0.17 with the latest version of
[#59694] testunit-0.1.5 install failure (may be setup.rb) — Jim Freeze <jim@...>
Hi
Jim Freeze [mailto:jim@freeze.org] wrote:
[#59699] mod_ruby - eruby - apache 2? — "Useko Netsumi" <usenets@...>
anyone work on that? i've been struggling to get the above combination to
[#59720] Re: testunit-0.1.5 install failure (may be setup.rb) — "Brian Wisti" <brian@...>
I figured out the problem. The default stacksize on Mac OS X is 512
[#59726] How to query FLT_MAX from Ruby code? — Lyle Johnson <lyle@...>
I hope I'm not setting myself up for a Doh! moment...
[#59734] String#to_class? — Tim Bates <tim@...>
I have a class being used in a unit test:
[#59759] Quickest way to get md5 of a file? — coma_killen@...
Hi,
[#59763] smtp server — Shannon Fang <xrfang@...>
Hello,
[#59777] Hash#update — Mark Slagell <ms@...>
Has anyone ever proposed making Hash#+ a nondestructive equivalent of
YANAGAWA Kazuhisa wrote:
[#59808] ANN: FreeRIDE 0.5.0 Release Candidate 1 — "Curt Hibbs" <curt@...>
[drum roll...]
FreeRIDE Developers -
So where's the debian package? :) In fact, I don't even see the rubyfx
[#59834] ruby-dev summary 19069-19150 — TAKAHASHI Masayoshi <maki@...>
Hello all,
[#59854] ANN: ruby 1.6.8 — matz@... (Yukihiro Matsumoto)
Hello everyone,
[#59873] Re: ruby 1.6.8 — "Ted" <ted@...>
> Yessss my precious 1.8 it callssss to ussss. : )
[#59887] freeide 0.5.0rc1 errors — "Kurt V. Hindenburg" <khindenburg@...>
Linux version with ruby 1.6.8 and latest versions of the other stuff....
[#59893] mod_ruby: What is the lifetime of my objects ? — "Vandemoortele Simon" <delirious_nospamplz@...>
[#59902] Tc/GTC/Fox - so many? — "Roman Rytov" <rrytov@...>
I have no expirience with Perl or Tcl so variety of UI libs a bit
[#59913] Struct Question — Jonas Hoffmann <ruby@...>
Hello,
[#59935] change in lookup of constants on 1.6.8? — Paul Brannan <pbrannan@...>
I have a piece of code that does something like the following:
[#59954] 1210 / 100 = 12? what? — Tom Sawyer <transami@...>
can someone explain this to me:
Hello Tom,
no i didn't realize that. i thought ruby would automatically change it to a
Hi Tom,
On Thursday 26 December 2002 11:42 pm, Brian Wisti wrote:
On Fri, Dec 27, 2002 at 04:10:59PM +0900, Tom Sawyer wrote:
Philipp Meier <meier@meisterbohne.de> writes:
On 2002.12.28, Lloyd Zusman <ljz@asfast.com> wrote:
Dossy <dossy@panoptic.com> writes:
[#59964] long strings — Matthew Huggett <mhuggett@...>
Hi:
[#59974] viral arguments — Tom Sawyer <transami@...>
thanks for all the response on the float problem. alot of people jumped on
[#59980] speed — ts <decoux@...>
[#60006] Ruby & Preprinted forms - will they work together? — colotechpro@... (John Reed)
I'm a Ruby newbie, but I've decided to write a commercial application
On Fri, 2002-12-27 at 17:32, Shashank Date wrote:
Dave Thomas wrote:
On Fri, 2002-12-27 at 19:52, Wai-Sun Chia wrote:
Dave Thomas (dave@pragprog.com) wrote:
[#60009] ruby-talk reaches message 60000 — dblack@...
Hi --
[#60016] Installing Fox, FXRuby and fxscintilla — Daniel Carrera <dcarrera@...>
I want to try out FreeRide, but just installing its dependencies has been
Daniel Carrera wrote:
Lyle Johnson (lyle@users.sourceforge.net) wrote:
On Saturday 28 December 2002 11:52 am, Lyle Johnson wrote:
[#60027] Re: 1210 / 100 = 12? what? — "Pe, Botp" <botp@...>
[#60044] WARN: mswin32 build binary file read change of behavior — "Milan Maksimovic" <maksa@...>
Hello,
[#60050] RAA suggestions — Gavin Sinclair <gsinclair@...>
1. Reserve "what's new" for genuinely new packages. Introduce a
Gavin Sinclair wrote:
[#60059] string.c (str_alloc) ruby 1.8 + ruby-gtk crash — "Ariff Abdullah" <skywizard@...>
str = ARGV[0] || ""
[#60061] Radical 0.6 — Idan Sofer <idan@...>
Radical 0.6 was released, including improvments in many fields including
[#60073] How to specify the period "." character when doing a gsub. — Kurt Euler <keuler@...>
All-
[#60075] Test::Unit 0.1.6 — <nathaniel@...>
If you don't know what Test::Unit is, I've included an explanation
On Sun, 29 Dec 2002 nathaniel@NOSPAMtalbott.ws wrote:
John Carter said:
[#60094] Hash question — "Kurt V. Hindenburg" <khindenburg@...>
I'm using FXRuby and YAML, but this question deals with using a hash :
[#60114] Ruby Document Bundle — Gavin Sinclair <gsinclair@...>
Just in time to wish you all a happy new year!
[#60119] FreeRIDE 0.5.0 Debian Packages — Mauricio Fern疣dez <batsman.geo@...>
[#60146] rbbr 0.2rev1 bombs out! — Wai-Sun Chia <waisun.chia@...>
rbbr is looking for a rbbr/config.rb module which is non-existent..
Hi,
Huh?
Since the mailing list is auto-gatewayed to c.l.r, all our email
On Monday, December 30, 2002, 11:21:08 PM, Wai-Sun wrote:
[#60159] FreeRIDE 0.5.0rc1: patch to allow per-user properties — Mauricio Fern疣dez <batsman.geo@...>
On Mon, Dec 30, 2002 at 09:35:23PM +0900, Mauricio Fern疣dez wrote:
Mauricio Fern疣dez wrote:
[#60179] Debian Packages for FreeRIDE 0.5.0rc1 available:; apt-get install now ;-) — Mauricio Fern疣dez <batsman.geo@...>
[#60182] Newbie Question - Problems with Ruby on My Mac — john_carnell@... (John Carnell)
Hi guys,
[#60188] Range#size — Martin DeMello <martindemello@...>
I think I missed something - why is Range#size (and all its synonyms)
Hi,
From: Gennady F. Bystritsky <gfb@tonesoft.com>
On Tuesday, December 31, 2002, 6:07:06 PM, Gennady wrote:
Hi,
Hi !
Hi,
Am Dienstag, 31. Dezember 2002 13:59 schrieb Yukihiro Matsumoto:
Hi,
Am Dienstag, 31. Dezember 2002 14:22 schrieb Yukihiro Matsumoto:
>>>>> "J" == Jonas Hoffmann <ruby@joelh.de> writes:
[#60206] Developing a website — "Shashank Date" <sdate@...>
I am planning to use Ruby to develop a website which will be hosted on
I have no reason to believe that you need anything special to make your
[#60211] Re: Fox, FXRuby, fxscintilla and FreeRide - again — Lyle Johnson <lyle@...>
Daniel Carrera wrote:
[#60217] ENV.clear — zhoujing@... (TOTO)
I tried
[#60221] win32_popen 0.1 — "Park Heesob" <phasis@...>
Hi, all.
Park,
Sorry for the late reply. I am catching up on missed emails.
[#60227] How to do bitwise ops on a byte? — Bernard Miller <forbytext@...>
Hello,
[#60258] — David Landrith <dlandrith@...>
I'm having two problems extending the array class.
FAQ for comp.lang.ruby
RUBY NEWSGROUP FAQ -- Welcome to comp.lang.ruby! (Revised 2002-11-20)
This FAQ contains information for those who want to:
1) learn more about Ruby, and want to
2) post to comp.lang.ruby or to the ruby-lang mail list, or want to
3) provide anonymous feedback to help us improve Ruby.
This FAQ will be posted monthly. If you are reading the text version via
the mailing list or the newsgroup, note that you can find it on the web
at: http://rubyhacker.com/clrFAQ.html
Note that this is *not* the Ruby language FAQ! This can be found at:
http://www.rubygarden.org/iowa/faqtotum
TABLE OF CONTENTS
1 About Ruby
1.1 What is Ruby?
1.2 Where can I find out more about Ruby?
2 About comp.lang.ruby.
2.1 Tell me about comp.lang.ruby.
2.2 Tell me the posting guidelines for comp.lang.ruby.
2.3 Tell me about the prolific Matz poster.
2.4 How do the mailing list and newsgroup interrelate?
2.5 What are these 5-digit message numbers?
3 Anything else?
1 About Ruby
1.1 What is Ruby?
Ruby is a very high level, fully OO programming language. Indeed,
Ruby is one of the relatively few pure OO languages. Yet despite
its conceptual simplicity, Ruby is still a powerful and practical
"industrial strength" development language.
Ruby selectively integrates many good ideas taken from Perl,
Python, Smalltalk, Eiffel, ADA, CLU, and LISP. Ruby combines
these ideas in a natural, well-coordinated system that embodies
the principles of least effort and least surprise to a
substantially greater extent than most comparable languages --
i.e., you get more bang for your buck, and what you write is more
likely to give you what you expected to get. Ruby is thus a
relatively easy to learn, easy to read, and easy to maintain
language; yet it is very powerful and sophisticated.
In addition to common OO features, Ruby also has threads,
singleton methods, mixins, fully integrated closures and
iterators, plus proper meta-classes. Ruby has a true
mark-and-sweep garbage collector, which makes code more reliable
and simplifies writing extensions. In summary, Ruby provides a
very powerful and very easy to deploy "standing on the shoulders
of giants" OO scaffolding/framework so that you can more quickly
and easily build what you want to build, to do what you want to
do.
You will find many former (and current) Perl, Python, Java, and
C++ users on comp.lang.ruby that can help you get up to speed in
Ruby.
Finally, Ruby is an "open source" development programming
language.
1.2 Where can I find out more about Ruby?
Ruby's home web site:
http://www.ruby-lang.org/en (Ruby English language home page.)
Follow the links to documentation, downloads, the Ruby
Application Archive, the Ruby mail list archives, and lots
of other interesting information.
Ruby's other major on-line documentation and links site:
http://www.rubycentral.com
(Nov 2002: Currently having DNS problems!)
Ruby FAQ:
http://www.rubygarden.org/iowa/faqtotum
Ruby User's Guide (introductory tutorial):
http://www.ruby-lang.org/~slagell/ruby/
Ruby Reference Manual:
http://www.ruby-lang.org/en/doc.html
Ruby classes, modules, and methods reference:
http://www.rubycentral.com/ref/
English language Ruby books (recent publication order):
Making Use of Ruby
by Suresh Mahadevan
Wiley; ISBN 0-471-21972-X (2002)
Teach Yourself Ruby in 21 Days
by Mark Slagell
Sams; ISBN: 0672322528 (March, 2002)
Ruby Developer's Guide
by Michael Neumann, Robert Feldt, Lyle Johnson
Publishers Group West; ISBN: 1928994644 (February, 2002)
The Ruby Way
by Hal Fulton
Sams; ISBN: 0672320835 (December, 2001)
Ruby In A Nutshell
by Yukihiro Matsumoto
O'Reilly & Associates; ISBN: 0596002149 (November, 2001)
Programming Ruby: A Pragmatic Programmers Guide
by Dave Thomas and Andrew Hunt
Addison Wesley; ISBN: 0201710897 (2000)
Internet version: http://www.rubycentral.com/ref/
Errata: http://www.pragmaticprogrammer.com/ruby/errata.html
Forthcoming English language Ruby books (author alpha order):
The Ruby Developer's Handbook
Robert Calco, Rich Kilmer, Dana Moore
Sams Publishing, ISBN: ??? (2002)
CANCELED, MARCH 2002 (for reasons unknown):
The Ruby Programming Language
by Yukihiro "Matz" Matsumoto and Keiju Ishitsuka
Addison Wesley Professional; ISBN: 020171096X (June, 2002)
German language Ruby books (author alpha order):
Das Einsteigerseminar Ruby. Der methodische und
ausfrliche Einstieg.
by Dirk Engel and Klaus Spreckelsen
ISBN: 3826672429
Programmieren mit Ruby
by Armin Roehrl, Stefan Schmiedl, Clemens Wyss, et al.
dpunkt.de; ISBN 3898641511 (February, 2002)
Programmieren mit Ruby. Handbuch f den pragmatischen
Programmierer.
Translation of the Thomas/Hunt book (Programming Ruby,
aka the Pickaxe Book)
Addison-Wesley, ISBN: 382731965X (2002)
Search past postings to comp.lang.ruby or the ruby-lang mail list
(which have been mirrored to each other since mid-2000):
http://groups.google.com/groups?hl=en&lr=&ie=ISO-8859-1&q=comp.lang.ruby
http://blade.nagaokaut.ac.jp/ruby/ruby-talk/index.shtml
Local Ruby users and groups in your area:
http://www.pragprog.com/ruby?RubyUserGroups
2 About comp.lang.ruby.
2.1 Tell me about comp.lang.ruby
comp.lang.ruby was officially approved in early May, 2000.
(Conrad Schneiker, the former maintainer of this FAQ, was
responsible for the "net paperwork" of creating this group.)
Here is the official charter:
CHARTER: comp.lang.ruby
The comp.lang.ruby newsgroup is devoted to discussions of the
Ruby programming language and related issues.
Examples of relevant postings include, but are not limited
to, the following subjects:
- Bug reports
- Announcements of software written with Ruby
- Examples of Ruby code
- Suggestions for Ruby developers
- Requests for help from new Ruby programmers
The newsgroup is not moderated. Binaries are prohibited
(except the small PGP type). Advertising is prohibited (except
for announcements of new Ruby-related products).
END CHARTER.
2.2 Tell me the posting guidelines for comp.lang.ruby.
(You should also follow these guidelines for the ruby-list mail
list, since it is mirrored to comp.lang.ruby.)
(1) ALWAYS be friendly, considerate, tactful, and tasteful. We
want to keep this forum hospitable to the growing ranks of
newbies, very young people, and their teachers, as well as
cater to fire breathing wizards. :-)
(2) Keep your content relevant and easy to follow. Try to keep
your content brief and to the point, but also try to include
all relevant information.
(a) The general format guidelines (aka USENET Netiquette) are
matters of common sense and common courtesy that make life
easier for 3rd parties to follow along (in real time or
when perusing archives):
- PLEASE NOTE! Include quoted text from previous posts
*BEFORE* your responses. And *selectively* quote as much
as is relevant.
- Use *plain* text; don't use HTML, RTF, or Word. Most
mail or newsreader programs have an option for this; if
yours doesn't, get a (freeware) program or use a
web-based service that does.
- Include examples from files as *in-line* text; don't
use attachments.
(b) If reporting a problem, give *all* the relevant
information the first time; this isn't the psychic friends
newsgroup. :-) When appropriate, include:
- The version of Ruby. ("ruby -v")
- The compiler name and version used to build Ruby.
- The OS type and level. ("uname -a")
- The actual error messages.
- An example (preferably simple) that produces the
problem.
(c) If reporting a bug, please copy (cc:) your post to:
mailto:ruby-bugs@ruby-lang.org
This will enter your report into the Ruby bug database.
You can browse the database at:
http://www.ruby-lang.org/cgi-bin/ruby-bugs
(3) Make the subject line maximally informative, so that people
who should be interested will read your post and so that people
who wouldn't be interested can easily avoid it.
*Usefully* describe the contents of your post:
This is OK:
"How can I do x with y on z?"
"Problem: did x, expected y, got z."
"Bug: doing x with module y crashed z."
This is *NOT* OK:
"Please help!!!"
"Newbie question"
"Need Ruby guru to tell me what's wrong"
(4) Finally, be considerate: don't be too lazy. If you are
seeking information, first make a reasonable effort to look it
up. As appropriate, check the Ruby home page, check the Ruby
FAQ and other documentation, use google.com to search past
comp.lang.ruby postings, and so on.
2.3 Tell me about the prolific Matz poster.
Matz (aka Yukihiro Matsumoto) is the wizard who created Ruby for
us, so be nice to him. He is very busy, so be patient when asking
questions. See the Ruby home page to find out more about him and
his work. I (Conrad Schneiker) founded comp.lang.ruby at his
suggestion. Contrary to lots of skepticism, it was approved on
the first attempt, with 200 yes votes.
2.4 How do the mailing list and newsgroup interrelate?
The mailing list is older. When the newsgroup was created, they
diverged. In mid-2001, Dave Thomas created a two-way gateway
that would "mirror" the newsgroup to the list and vice versa.
(This was accomplished in 200 lines of Ruby code.) It is not
perfect; because of variability in the news feed, sometimes
messages are dropped or duplicated.
The online archive of the mailing list therefore includes most
of the traffic on the newsgroup, excluding the posts that were
made before the creation of the gateway.
Note: Spam or other inappropriate messages are NOT the
responsibility of Dave Thomas, who maintains the gateway. He
does everything in his power to deal with this issue. Do NOT
report spam to his ISP merely because the messages come from
his server.
2.5 What are these 5-digit message numbers?
Historically, every item on the mailing list had a subject
starting with a string like: [ruby-talk:99999]
The message numbers were convenient since they were strictly
serial and formed a good way to refer to a past message. But
they interfered with threading; Matz removed them after the
matter was put to a vote in early 2002.
The news header still refers to this number, should anyone
wish to retrieve it. On the mailing list this number can
now be found in the X-Mail-Count: header.
You can point to a specific message by appending it onto the
ruby-talk.org URL; i.e. http://ruby-talk.org/12345 will refer
to message 12345.
3. Anything else?
If you are new to Ruby (or haven't previously taken the Ruby User
Survey), please take a moment to anonymously tell us about your
programming background and about your Ruby-related interests. The
results will be reported back to the Ruby community from time to
time. This helps us do a better job of helping each other, and to
more effectively expand the Ruby community for our mutual benefit.
The survey is at:
http://dev.rubycentral.com/survey.html
This FAQ was produced by Conrad Schneiker (schneiker@jump.net).
It is now maintained by Hal Fulton (hal9000@hypermetrics.com).
I'm interested in corrections and suggestions, but remember that
the purpose of this FAQ is to be a brief and simple introduction
for new comp.lang.ruby readers.
In closing, one of the reasons that Ruby was designed to be
relatively simple, uniform, yet very powerful was to make serious
programming (among other kinds) fun. We hope you will help us
keep comp.lang.ruby fun as well. Enjoy. :-)