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== \IO Streams
This page describes:
- {Stream classes}[rdoc-ref:io_streams.rdoc@Stream+Classes].
- {Pre-existing streams}[rdoc-ref:io_streams.rdoc@Pre-Existing+Streams].
- {User-created streams}[rdoc-ref:io_streams.rdoc@User-Created+Streams].
- {Basic \IO}[rdoc-ref:io_streams.rdoc@Basic+IO], including:
- {Position}[rdoc-ref:io_streams.rdoc@Position].
- {Open and closed streams}[rdoc-ref:io_streams.rdoc@Open+and+Closed+Streams].
- {End-of-stream}[rdoc-ref:io_streams.rdoc@End-of-Stream].
- {Line \IO}[rdoc-ref:io_streams.rdoc@Line+IO], including:
- {Line separator}[rdoc-ref:io_streams.rdoc@Line+Separator].
- {Line limit}[rdoc-ref:io_streams.rdoc@Line+Limit].
- {Line number}[rdoc-ref:io_streams.rdoc@Line+Number].
- {Line options}[rdoc-ref:io_streams.rdoc@Line+Options].
- {Character \IO}[rdoc-ref:io_streams.rdoc@Character+IO].
- {Byte \IO}[rdoc-ref:io_streams.rdoc@Byte+IO].
- {Codepoint \IO}[rdoc-ref:io_streams.rdoc@Codepoint+IO].
=== Stream Classes
Ruby supports processing data as \IO streams;
that is, as data that may be read, re-read, written, re-written,
and traversed via iteration.
Core classes with such support include:
- IO, and its derived class File.
- {StringIO}[rdoc-ref:StringIO]: for processing a string.
- {ARGF}[rdoc-ref:ARGF]: for processing files cited on the command line.
Except as noted, the instance methods described on this page
are available in classes \ARGF, \File, \IO, and \StringIO.
A few, also noted, are available in class \Kernel.
=== Pre-Existing Streams
Pre-existing streams that are referenced by constants include:
- $stdin: read-only instance of \IO.
- $stdout: write-only instance of \IO.
- $stderr: read-only instance of \IO.
- \ARGF: read-only instance of \ARGF.
=== User-Created Streams
You can create streams:
- \File:
- File.new: returns a new \File object;
the file should be closed when no longer needed.
- File.open: passes a new \File object to given the block;
the file is automatically closed on block exit.
- \IO:
- IO.new: returns a new \IO object for the given integer file descriptor;
the \IO object should be closed when no longer needed.
- IO.open: passes a new \IO object to the given block;
the \IO object is automatically closed on block exit.
- IO.popen: returns a new \IO object that is connected to the $stdin
and $stdout of a newly-launched subprocess.
- Kernel#open: returns a new \IO object connected to a given source:
stream, file, or subprocess;
the \IO object should be closed when no longer needed.
- \StringIO:
- StringIO.new: returns a new \StringIO object;
the \StringIO object should be closed when no longer needed.
- StringIO.open: passes a new \StringIO object to the given block;
the \StringIO object is automatically closed on block exit.
(You cannot create an \ARGF object, but one already exists.)
=== About the Examples
Many examples here use these variables:
:include: doc/examples/files.rdoc
=== Basic \IO
You can perform basic stream \IO with these methods:
- IO#read: Returns all remaining or the next _n_ bytes read from the stream,
for a given _n_:
f = File.new('t.txt')
f.read # => "First line\nSecond line\n\nFourth line\nFifth line\n"
f.rewind
f.read(30) # => "First line\r\nSecond line\r\n\r\nFou"
f.read(30) # => "rth line\r\nFifth line\r\n"
f.read(30) # => nil
f.close
- IO#write: Writes one or more given strings to the stream:
$stdout.write('Hello', ', ', 'World!', "\n") # => 14
$stdout.write('foo', :bar, 2, "\n")
Output:
Hello, World!
foobar2
==== Position
An \IO stream has a nonnegative integer _position_,
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which is the byte offset at which the next read or write is to occur.
A new stream has position zero (and line number zero);
method +rewind+ resets the position (and line number) to zero.
The relevant methods:
- IO#tell (aliased as +#pos+):
Returns the current position (in bytes) in the stream:
f = File.new('t.txt')
f.tell # => 0
f.gets # => "First line\n"
f.tell # => 12
f.close
- IO#pos=: Sets the position of the stream (in bytes):
f = File.new('t.txt')
f.tell # => 0
f.pos = 20 # => 20
f.tell # => 20
f.close
- IO#seek: Sets the position of the stream to a given integer +offset+
(in bytes), with respect to a given constant +whence+, which is one of:
- +:CUR+ or <tt>IO::SEEK_CUR</tt>:
Repositions the stream to its current position plus the given +offset+:
f = File.new('t.txt')
f.tell # => 0
f.seek(20, :CUR) # => 0
f.tell # => 20
f.seek(-10, :CUR) # => 0
f.tell # => 10
f.close
- +:END+ or <tt>IO::SEEK_END</tt>:
Repositions the stream to its end plus the given +offset+:
f = File.new('t.txt')
f.tell # => 0
f.seek(0, :END) # => 0 # Repositions to stream end.
f.tell # => 52
f.seek(-20, :END) # => 0
f.tell # => 32
f.seek(-40, :END) # => 0
f.tell # => 12
f.close
- +:SET+ or <tt>IO:SEEK_SET</tt>:
Repositions the stream to the given +offset+:
f = File.new('t.txt')
f.tell # => 0
f.seek(20, :SET) # => 0
f.tell # => 20
f.seek(40, :SET) # => 0
f.tell # => 40
f.close
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- IO#rewind: Positions the stream to the beginning (also resetting the line number):
f = File.new('t.txt')
f.tell # => 0
f.gets # => "First line\n"
f.tell # => 12
f.rewind # => 0
f.tell # => 0
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f.lineno # => 0
f.close
==== Open and Closed Streams
A new \IO stream may be open for reading, open for writing, or both.
You can close a stream using these methods:
- IO#close: Closes the stream for both reading and writing.
- IO#close_read (not in \ARGF): Closes the stream for reading.
- IO#close_write (not in \ARGF): Closes the stream for writing.
You can query whether a stream is closed using this method:
- IO#closed?: Returns whether the stream is closed.
==== End-of-Stream
You can query whether a stream is positioned at its end using
method IO#eof? (also aliased as +#eof+).
You can reposition to end-of-stream by reading all stream content:
f = File.new('t.txt')
f.eof? # => false
f.read # => "First line\nSecond line\n\nFourth line\nFifth line\n"
f.eof? # => true
Or by using method IO#seek:
f = File.new('t.txt')
f.eof? # => false
f.seek(0, :END)
f.eof? # => true
=== Line \IO
You can read an \IO stream line-by-line using these methods:
- IO#each_line: Passes each line to the block:
f = File.new('t.txt')
f.each_line {|line| p line }
Output:
"First line\n"
"Second line\n"
"\n"
"Fourth line\n"
"Fifth line\n"
The reading may begin mid-line:
f = File.new('t.txt')
f.pos = 27
f.each_line {|line| p line }
Output:
"rth line\n"
"Fifth line\n"
- IO#gets (also in Kernel): Returns the next line (which may begin mid-line):
f = File.new('t.txt')
f.gets # => "First line\n"
f.gets # => "Second line\n"
f.pos = 27
f.gets # => "rth line\n"
f.readlines # => ["Fifth line\n"]
f.gets # => nil
- IO#readline (also in Kernel; not in StringIO):
Like #gets, but raises an exception at end-of-stream.
- IO#readlines (also in Kernel): Returns all remaining lines in an array;
may begin mid-line:
f = File.new('t.txt')
f.pos = 19
f.readlines # => ["ine\n", "\n", "Fourth line\n", "Fifth line\n"]
f.readlines # => []
Each of these reader methods may be called with:
- An optional line separator, +sep+.
- An optional line-size limit, +limit+.
- Both +sep+ and +limit+.
You can write to an \IO stream line-by-line using this method:
- IO#puts (also in Kernel; not in \StringIO): Writes objects to the stream:
f = File.new('t.tmp', 'w')
f.puts('foo', :bar, 1, 2.0, Complex(3, 0))
f.flush
File.read('t.tmp') # => "foo\nbar\n1\n2.0\n3+0i\n"
==== Line Separator
The default line separator is the given by the global variable <tt>$/</tt>,
whose value is by default <tt>"\n"</tt>.
The line to be read next is all data from the current position
to the next line separator:
f = File.new('t.txt')
f.gets # => "First line\n"
f.gets # => "Second line\n"
f.gets # => "\n"
f.gets # => "Fourth line\n"
f.gets # => "Fifth line\n"
f.close
You can specify a different line separator:
f = File.new('t.txt')
f.gets('l') # => "First l"
f.gets('li') # => "ine\nSecond li"
f.gets('lin') # => "ne\n\nFourth lin"
f.gets # => "e\n"
f.close
There are two special line separators:
- +nil+: The entire stream is read into a single string:
f = File.new('t.txt')
f.gets(nil) # => "First line\nSecond line\n\nFourth line\nFifth line\n"
f.close
- <tt>''</tt> (the empty string): The next "paragraph" is read
(paragraphs being separated by two consecutive line separators):
f = File.new('t.txt')
f.gets('') # => "First line\nSecond line\n\n"
f.gets('') # => "Fourth line\nFifth line\n"
f.close
==== Line Limit
The line to be read may be further defined by an optional integer argument +limit+,
which specifies that the number of bytes returned may not be (much) longer
than the given +limit+;
a multi-byte character will not be split, and so a line may be slightly longer
than the given limit.
If +limit+ is not given, the line is determined only by +sep+.
# Text with 1-byte characters.
File.new('t.txt') {|f| f.gets(1) } # => "F"
File.new('t.txt') {|f| f.gets(2) } # => "Fi"
File.new('t.txt') {|f| f.gets(3) } # => "Fir"
File.new('t.txt') {|f| f.gets(4) } # => "Firs"
# No more than one line.
File.new('t.txt') {|f| f.gets(10) } # => "First line"
File.new('t.txt') {|f| f.gets(11) } # => "First line\n"
File.new('t.txt') {|f| f.gets(12) } # => "First line\n"
# Text with 2-byte characters, which will not be split.
File.new('r.rus') {|f| f.gets(1).size } # => 1
File.new('r.rus') {|f| f.gets(2).size } # => 1
File.new('r.rus') {|f| f.gets(3).size } # => 2
File.new('r.rus') {|f| f.gets(4).size } # => 2
==== Line Separator and Line Limit
With arguments +sep+ and +limit+ given,
combines the two behaviors:
- Returns the next line as determined by line separator +sep+.
- But returns no more bytes than are allowed by the limit.
Example:
File.new('t.txt') {|f| f.gets('li', 20) } # => "First li"
File.new('t.txt') {|f| f.gets('li', 2) } # => "Fi"
==== Line Number
A readable \IO stream has a _line_ _number_,
which is the non-negative integer line number
in the stream where the next read will occur.
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The line number is the number of lines read by certain line-oriented methods
(IO.foreach, IO#each_line, IO#gets, IO#readline, and IO#readlines)
according to the given (or default) line separator +sep+.
A new stream is initially has line number zero (and position zero);
method +rewind+ resets the line number (and position) to zero.
\Method IO#lineno returns the line number.
Reading lines from a stream usually changes its line number:
f = File.new('t.txt', 'r')
f.lineno # => 0
f.readline # => "This is line one.\n"
f.lineno # => 1
f.readline # => "This is the second line.\n"
f.lineno # => 2
f.readline # => "Here's the third line.\n"
f.lineno # => 3
f.eof? # => true
f.close
Iterating over lines in a stream usually changes its line number:
File.open('t.txt') do |f|
f.each_line do |line|
p "position=#{f.pos} eof?=#{f.eof?} lineno=#{f.lineno}"
end
end
Output:
"position=11 eof?=false lineno=1"
"position=23 eof?=false lineno=2"
"position=24 eof?=false lineno=3"
"position=36 eof?=false lineno=4"
"position=47 eof?=true lineno=5"
==== Line Options
A number of \IO methods accept optional keyword arguments
that determine how lines in a stream are to be treated:
- +:chomp+: If +true+, line separators are omitted; default is +false+.
=== Character \IO
You can process an \IO stream character-by-character using these methods:
- IO#getc: Reads and returns the next character from the stream:
f = File.new('t.rus')
f.getc # => "т"
f.getc # => "е"
f.getc # => "с"
f.getc # => "т"
f.getc # => nil
- IO#readchar (not in \StringIO):
Like #getc, but raises an exception at end-of-stream:
f.readchar # Raises EOFError.
- IO#ungetc (not in \ARGF):
Pushes back ("unshifts") a character or integer onto the stream:
path = 't.tmp'
File.write(path, 'foo')
File.open(path) do |f|
f.ungetc('т')
f.read # => "тfoo"
end
- IO#putc (also in Kernel): Writes a character to the stream:
File.open('t.tmp', 'w') do |f|
f.putc('т')
f.putc('е')
f.putc('с')
f.putc('т')
end
File.read('t.tmp') # => "тест"
- IO#each_char: Reads each remaining character in the stream,
passing the character to the given block:
File.open('t.rus') do |f|
f.pos = 4
f.each_char {|c| p c }
end
Output:
"с"
"т"
=== Byte \IO
You can process an \IO stream byte-by-byte using these methods:
- IO#getbyte: Returns the next 8-bit byte as an integer in range 0..255:
File.read('t.dat')
# => "\xFE\xFF\x99\x90\x99\x91\x99\x92\x99\x93\x99\x94"
File.read('t.dat')
# => "\xFE\xFF\x99\x90\x99\x91\x99\x92\x99\x93\x99\x94"
f = File.new('t.dat')
f.getbyte # => 254
f.getbyte # => 255
f.seek(-2, :END)
f.getbyte # => 153
f.getbyte # => 148
f.getbyte # => nil
- IO#readbyte (not in \StringIO):
Like #getbyte, but raises an exception if at end-of-stream:
f.readbyte # Raises EOFError.
- IO#ungetbyte (not in \ARGF):
Pushes back ("unshifts") a byte back onto the stream:
f.ungetbyte(0)
f.ungetbyte(01)
f.read # => "\u0001\u0000"
- IO#each_byte: Reads each remaining byte in the stream,
passing the byte to the given block:
f.seek(-4, :END)
f.each_byte {|b| p b }
Output:
153
147
153
148
=== Codepoint \IO
You can process an \IO stream codepoint-by-codepoint using method
+#each_codepoint+:
a = []
File.open('t.rus') do |f|
f.each_codepoint {|c| a << c }
end
a # => [1090, 1077, 1089, 1090]