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Because it is more natural way to test substring inclusion. Also, in this particular case it is much faster. In general, using `Regexp.new str` for such kind of things is dangerous. The string must be escaped, unless you know what you're doing. Example: Regexp.new "\\" # HELLO WINDOWS # RegexpError: too short escape sequence: /\/ The right way to do this is escape the string Regexp.new Regexp.escape "\\" # => /\\/ Here is the benchmark showing how faster `include?` call is. ``` require 'benchmark/ips' Benchmark.ips do |x| x.report('include?') { !"index".to_s.include? File::SEPARATOR } x.report(' !~ ') { "index" !~ Regexp.new(File::SEPARATOR) } end __END__ Calculating ------------------------------------- include? 75754 i/100ms !~ 21089 i/100ms ------------------------------------------------- include? 3172882.3 (±4.5%) i/s - 15832586 in 5.000659s !~ 322918.8 (±8.6%) i/s - 1602764 in 4.999509s ``` Extra `.to_s` call is needed to handle the case when `action_name` is `nil`. If it is omitted, some tests fail. |
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.. | ||
railties | ||
asset_paths.rb | ||
base.rb | ||
callbacks.rb | ||
collector.rb | ||
helpers.rb | ||
logger.rb | ||
rendering.rb | ||
translation.rb | ||
url_for.rb |