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# NEWS for Ruby 3.2.0
2021-12-15 11:24:31 -05:00
This document is a list of user-visible feature changes
since the **3.1.0** release, except for bug fixes.
Note that each entry is kept to a minimum, see links for details.
## Language changes
Evaluate multiple assignment left hand side before right hand side In regular assignment, Ruby evaluates the left hand side before the right hand side. For example: ```ruby foo[0] = bar ``` Calls `foo`, then `bar`, then `[]=` on the result of `foo`. Previously, multiple assignment didn't work this way. If you did: ```ruby abc.def, foo[0] = bar, baz ``` Ruby would previously call `bar`, then `baz`, then `abc`, then `def=` on the result of `abc`, then `foo`, then `[]=` on the result of `foo`. This change makes multiple assignment similar to single assignment, changing the evaluation order of the above multiple assignment code to calling `abc`, then `foo`, then `bar`, then `baz`, then `def=` on the result of `abc`, then `[]=` on the result of `foo`. Implementing this is challenging with the stack-based virtual machine. We need to keep track of all of the left hand side attribute setter receivers and setter arguments, and then keep track of the stack level while handling the assignment processing, so we can issue the appropriate topn instructions to get the receiver. Here's an example of how the multiple assignment is executed, showing the stack and instructions: ``` self # putself abc # send abc, self # putself abc, foo # send abc, foo, 0 # putobject 0 abc, foo, 0, [bar, baz] # evaluate RHS abc, foo, 0, [bar, baz], baz, bar # expandarray abc, foo, 0, [bar, baz], baz, bar, abc # topn 5 abc, foo, 0, [bar, baz], baz, abc, bar # swap abc, foo, 0, [bar, baz], baz, def= # send abc, foo, 0, [bar, baz], baz # pop abc, foo, 0, [bar, baz], baz, foo # topn 3 abc, foo, 0, [bar, baz], baz, foo, 0 # topn 3 abc, foo, 0, [bar, baz], baz, foo, 0, baz # topn 2 abc, foo, 0, [bar, baz], baz, []= # send abc, foo, 0, [bar, baz], baz # pop abc, foo, 0, [bar, baz] # pop [bar, baz], foo, 0, [bar, baz] # setn 3 [bar, baz], foo, 0 # pop [bar, baz], foo # pop [bar, baz] # pop ``` As multiple assignment must deal with splats, post args, and any level of nesting, it gets quite a bit more complex than this in non-trivial cases. To handle this, struct masgn_state is added to keep track of the overall state of the mass assignment, which stores a linked list of struct masgn_attrasgn, one for each assigned attribute. This adds a new optimization that replaces a topn 1/pop instruction combination with a single swap instruction for multiple assignment to non-aref attributes. This new approach isn't compatible with one of the optimizations previously used, in the case where the multiple assignment return value was not needed, there was no lhs splat, and one of the left hand side used an attribute setter. This removes that optimization. Removing the optimization allowed for removing the POP_ELEMENT and adjust_stack functions. This adds a benchmark to measure how much slower multiple assignment is with the correct evaluation order. This benchmark shows: * 4-9% decrease for attribute sets * 14-23% decrease for array member sets * Basically same speed for local variable sets Importantly, it shows no significant difference between the popped (where return value of the multiple assignment is not needed) and !popped (where return value of the multiple assignment is needed) cases for attribute and array member sets. This indicates the previous optimization, which was dropped in the evaluation order fix and only affected the popped case, is not important to performance. Fixes [Bug #4443]
2021-04-21 13:49:19 -04:00
* Anonymous rest and keyword rest arguments can now be passed as
arguments, instead of just used in method parameters.
[[Feature #18351]]
```ruby
def foo(*)
bar(*)
end
def baz(**)
quux(**)
end
```
2022-03-30 14:39:27 -04:00
* A proc that accepts a single positional argument and keywords will
no longer autosplat. [[Bug #18633]]
```ruby
proc{|a, **k| a}.call([1, 2])
# Ruby 3.1 and before
# => 1
# Ruby 3.2 and after
# => [1, 2]
```
Fix constant assignment evaluation order Previously, the right hand side was always evaluated before the left hand side for constant assignments. For the following: ```ruby lhs::C = rhs ``` rhs was evaluated before lhs, which is inconsistant with attribute assignment (lhs.m = rhs), and apparently also does not conform to JIS 3017:2013 11.4.2.2.3. Fix this by changing evaluation order. Previously, the above compiled to: ``` 0000 putself ( 1)[Li] 0001 opt_send_without_block <calldata!mid:rhs, argc:0, FCALL|VCALL|ARGS_SIMPLE> 0003 dup 0004 putself 0005 opt_send_without_block <calldata!mid:lhs, argc:0, FCALL|VCALL|ARGS_SIMPLE> 0007 setconstant :C 0009 leave ``` After this change: ``` 0000 putself ( 1)[Li] 0001 opt_send_without_block <calldata!mid:lhs, argc:0, FCALL|VCALL|ARGS_SIMPLE> 0003 putself 0004 opt_send_without_block <calldata!mid:rhs, argc:0, FCALL|VCALL|ARGS_SIMPLE> 0006 swap 0007 topn 1 0009 swap 0010 setconstant :C 0012 leave ``` Note that if expr is not a module/class, then a TypeError is not raised until after the evaluation of rhs. This is because that error is raised by setconstant. If we wanted to raise TypeError before evaluation of rhs, we would have to add a VM instruction for calling vm_check_if_namespace. Changing assignment order for single assignments caused problems in the multiple assignment code, revealing that the issue also affected multiple assignment. Fix the multiple assignment code so left-to-right evaluation also works for constant assignments. Do some refactoring of the multiple assignment code to reduce duplication after adding support for constants. Rename struct masgn_attrasgn to masgn_lhs_node, since it now handles both constants and attributes. Add add_masgn_lhs_node static function for adding data for lhs attribute and constant setting. Fixes [Bug #15928]
2021-04-30 19:01:27 -04:00
* Constant assignment evaluation order for constants set on explicit
objects has been made consistent with single attribute assignment
evaluation order. With this code:
Fix constant assignment evaluation order Previously, the right hand side was always evaluated before the left hand side for constant assignments. For the following: ```ruby lhs::C = rhs ``` rhs was evaluated before lhs, which is inconsistant with attribute assignment (lhs.m = rhs), and apparently also does not conform to JIS 3017:2013 11.4.2.2.3. Fix this by changing evaluation order. Previously, the above compiled to: ``` 0000 putself ( 1)[Li] 0001 opt_send_without_block <calldata!mid:rhs, argc:0, FCALL|VCALL|ARGS_SIMPLE> 0003 dup 0004 putself 0005 opt_send_without_block <calldata!mid:lhs, argc:0, FCALL|VCALL|ARGS_SIMPLE> 0007 setconstant :C 0009 leave ``` After this change: ``` 0000 putself ( 1)[Li] 0001 opt_send_without_block <calldata!mid:lhs, argc:0, FCALL|VCALL|ARGS_SIMPLE> 0003 putself 0004 opt_send_without_block <calldata!mid:rhs, argc:0, FCALL|VCALL|ARGS_SIMPLE> 0006 swap 0007 topn 1 0009 swap 0010 setconstant :C 0012 leave ``` Note that if expr is not a module/class, then a TypeError is not raised until after the evaluation of rhs. This is because that error is raised by setconstant. If we wanted to raise TypeError before evaluation of rhs, we would have to add a VM instruction for calling vm_check_if_namespace. Changing assignment order for single assignments caused problems in the multiple assignment code, revealing that the issue also affected multiple assignment. Fix the multiple assignment code so left-to-right evaluation also works for constant assignments. Do some refactoring of the multiple assignment code to reduce duplication after adding support for constants. Rename struct masgn_attrasgn to masgn_lhs_node, since it now handles both constants and attributes. Add add_masgn_lhs_node static function for adding data for lhs attribute and constant setting. Fixes [Bug #15928]
2021-04-30 19:01:27 -04:00
```ruby
foo::BAR = baz
```
`foo` is now called before `baz`. Similarly, for multiple assignments
to constants, left-to-right evaluation order is used. With this
Fix constant assignment evaluation order Previously, the right hand side was always evaluated before the left hand side for constant assignments. For the following: ```ruby lhs::C = rhs ``` rhs was evaluated before lhs, which is inconsistant with attribute assignment (lhs.m = rhs), and apparently also does not conform to JIS 3017:2013 11.4.2.2.3. Fix this by changing evaluation order. Previously, the above compiled to: ``` 0000 putself ( 1)[Li] 0001 opt_send_without_block <calldata!mid:rhs, argc:0, FCALL|VCALL|ARGS_SIMPLE> 0003 dup 0004 putself 0005 opt_send_without_block <calldata!mid:lhs, argc:0, FCALL|VCALL|ARGS_SIMPLE> 0007 setconstant :C 0009 leave ``` After this change: ``` 0000 putself ( 1)[Li] 0001 opt_send_without_block <calldata!mid:lhs, argc:0, FCALL|VCALL|ARGS_SIMPLE> 0003 putself 0004 opt_send_without_block <calldata!mid:rhs, argc:0, FCALL|VCALL|ARGS_SIMPLE> 0006 swap 0007 topn 1 0009 swap 0010 setconstant :C 0012 leave ``` Note that if expr is not a module/class, then a TypeError is not raised until after the evaluation of rhs. This is because that error is raised by setconstant. If we wanted to raise TypeError before evaluation of rhs, we would have to add a VM instruction for calling vm_check_if_namespace. Changing assignment order for single assignments caused problems in the multiple assignment code, revealing that the issue also affected multiple assignment. Fix the multiple assignment code so left-to-right evaluation also works for constant assignments. Do some refactoring of the multiple assignment code to reduce duplication after adding support for constants. Rename struct masgn_attrasgn to masgn_lhs_node, since it now handles both constants and attributes. Add add_masgn_lhs_node static function for adding data for lhs attribute and constant setting. Fixes [Bug #15928]
2021-04-30 19:01:27 -04:00
code:
```ruby
foo1::BAR1, foo2::BAR2 = baz1, baz2
```
The following evaluation order is now used:
1. `foo1`
2. `foo2`
3. `baz1`
4. `baz2`
[[Bug #15928]]
* Find pattern is no longer experimental.
[[Feature #18585]]
* Methods taking a rest parameter (like `*args`) and wishing to delegate keyword
arguments through `foo(*args)` must now be marked with `ruby2_keywords`
(if not already the case). In other words, all methods wishing to delegate
keyword arguments through `*args` must now be marked with `ruby2_keywords`,
with no exception. This will make it easier to transition to other ways of
delegation once a library can require Ruby 3+. Previously, the `ruby2_keywords`
flag was kept if the receiving method took `*args`, but this was a bug and an
inconsistency. A good technique to find the potentially-missing `ruby2_keywords`
is to run the test suite, for where it fails find the last method which must
receive keyword arguments, use `puts nil, caller, nil` there, and check each
method/block on the call chain which must delegate keywords is correctly marked
as `ruby2_keywords`. [[Bug #18625]] [[Bug #16466]]
```ruby
def target(**kw)
end
# Accidentally worked without ruby2_keywords in Ruby 2.7-3.1, ruby2_keywords
# needed in 3.2+. Just like (*args, **kwargs) or (...) would be needed on
# both #foo and #bar when migrating away from ruby2_keywords.
ruby2_keywords def bar(*args)
target(*args)
end
ruby2_keywords def foo(*args)
bar(*args)
end
foo(k: 1)
```
* `eval` and related methods are able to generate code coverage. Enabled using
`Coverage.setup(:all)` or `Coverge.setup(eval: true)`. [[Feature #19008]]
* `Coverage.supported?(mode)` enables detection of what coverage modes are
supported. [[Feature #19026]]
2022-09-23 06:58:01 -04:00
## Command line options
## Core classes updates
2021-12-15 11:24:31 -05:00
Note: We're only listing outstanding class updates.
* Fiber::Scheduler
* Introduce `Fiber::Scheduler#io_select` for non-blocking `IO.select`. [[Feature #19060]]
* IO
* Introduce `IO#timeout=` and `IO#timeout` which can cause
`IO::TimeoutError` to be raised if a blocking operation exceeds the
specified timeout. [[Feature #18630]]
```ruby
STDIN.timeout = 1
STDIN.read # => Blocking operation timed out! (IO::TimeoutError)
```
* Class
* `Class#attached_object`, which returns the object for which
the receiver is the singleton class. Raises `TypeError` if the
receiver is not a singleton class.
[[Feature #12084]]
```ruby
class Foo; end
Foo.singleton_class.attached_object #=> Foo
Foo.new.singleton_class.attached_object #=> #<Foo:0x000000010491a370>
Foo.attached_object #=> TypeError: `Foo' is not a singleton class
nil.singleton_class.attached_object #=> TypeError: `NilClass' is not a singleton class
```
* Data
* New core class to represent simple immutable value object. The class is
similar to `Struct` and partially shares an implementation, but has more
lean and strict API. [[Feature #16122]]
* Encoding
* Encoding#replicate has been deprecated and will be removed in 3.3. [[Feature #18949]]
2022-09-12 08:59:45 -04:00
* The dummy `Encoding::UTF_16` and `Encoding::UTF_32` encodings no longer
try to dynamically guess the endian based on a byte order mark.
Use `Encoding::UTF_16BE/UTF_16LE` and `Encoding::UTF_32BE/UTF_32LE` instead.
This change speeds up getting the encoding of a String. [[Feature #18949]]
* Enumerator
* Enumerator.product has been added. Enumerator::Product is the implementation. [[Feature #18685]]
* Hash
* Hash#shift now always returns nil if the hash is
empty, instead of returning the default value or
calling the default proc. [[Bug #16908]]
* Integer
* Integer#ceildiv has been added. [[Feature #18809]]
* Kernel
* Kernel#binding raises RuntimeError if called from a non-Ruby frame
(such as a method defined in C). [[Bug #18487]]
* MatchData
* MatchData#byteoffset has been added. [[Feature #13110]]
* MatchData#deconstruct has been added. [[Feature #18821]]
* MatchData#deconstruct_keys has been added. [[Feature #18821]]
2022-01-05 02:58:23 -05:00
* Module
* Module.used_refinements has been added. [[Feature #14332]]
* Module#refinements has been added. [[Feature #12737]]
* Module#const_added has been added. [[Feature #17881]]
* Module#undefined_instance_methods has been added. [[Feature #12655]]
2022-01-13 03:45:25 -05:00
* Proc
* Proc#dup returns an instance of subclass. [[Bug #17545]]
* Proc#parameters now accepts lambda keyword. [[Feature #15357]]
2022-01-13 03:45:25 -05:00
* Process
* Added `RLIMIT_NPTS` constant to FreeBSD platform
* Regexp
* Regexp.new now supports passing the regexp flags not only as an Integer,
but also as a String. Unknown flags raise ArgumentError.
Otherwise, anything other than `true`, `false`, `nil` or Integer will be warned.
[[Feature #18788]]
* Refinement
* Refinement#refined_class has been added. [[Feature #12737]]
2022-01-05 02:58:23 -05:00
2022-10-22 02:36:59 -04:00
* RubyVM::AbstractSyntaxTree
* Add `error_tolerant` option for `parse`, `parse_file` and `of`. [[Feature #19013]]
* Set
* Set is now available as a built-in class without the need for `require "set"`. [[Feature #16989]]
It is currently autoloaded via the `Set` constant or a call to `Enumerable#to_set`.
* Socket
* Added the following constants for supported platforms.
* `SO_INCOMING_CPU`
* `SO_INCOMING_NAPI_ID`
* `SO_RTABLE`
* `SO_SETFIB`
* `SO_USER_COOKIE`
* `TCP_KEEPALIVE`
* `TCP_CONNECTION_INFO`
* String
* String#byteindex and String#byterindex have been added. [[Feature #13110]]
2022-03-11 03:11:32 -05:00
* Update Unicode to Version 14.0.0 and Emoji Version 14.0. [[Feature #18037]]
(also applies to Regexp)
* String#bytesplice has been added. [[Feature #18598]]
* Struct
* A Struct class can also be initialized with keyword arguments
without `keyword_init: true` on `Struct.new` [[Feature #16806]]
* TracePoint
* TracePoint#binding now returns `nil` for `c_call`/`c_return` TracePoints.
[[Bug #18487]]
* TracePoint#enable `target_thread` keyword argument now defaults to the
current thread if `target` and `target_line` keyword arguments are not
passed. [[Bug #16889]]
## Stdlib updates
2022-08-21 22:40:38 -04:00
* SyntaxSuggest
* The feature of `syntax_suggest` formerly `dead_end` is integrated in Ruby.
[[Feature #18159]]
* The following default gems are updated.
* RubyGems 3.4.0.dev
* bigdecimal 3.1.2
* bundler 2.4.0.dev
* cgi 0.3.3
* date 3.2.3
* erb 3.0.0
* error_highlight 0.4.0
* etc 1.4.0
* fiddle 1.1.1
* io-console 0.5.11
* io-nonblock 0.1.1
* io-wait 0.3.0.pre
* ipaddr 1.2.4
* irb 1.4.2
* json 2.6.2
* logger 1.5.1
* net-http 0.3.0
* net-protocol 0.1.3
* openssl 3.1.0.pre
* ostruct 0.5.5
* psych 5.0.0.dev
* reline 0.3.1
* securerandom 0.2.0
* set 1.0.3
* stringio 3.0.3
* syntax_suggest 0.0.1
* timeout 0.3.0
* The following bundled gems are updated.
2022-08-18 03:04:23 -04:00
* minitest 5.16.3
2022-10-16 05:04:15 -04:00
* power_assert 2.0.2
2022-10-04 03:09:33 -04:00
* test-unit 3.5.5
2022-10-08 03:05:42 -04:00
* net-ftp 0.2.0
* net-imap 0.3.1
* net-pop 0.1.2
2022-10-30 03:04:08 -04:00
* net-smtp 0.3.3
* rbs 2.7.0
2022-07-06 03:03:41 -04:00
* typeprof 0.21.3
2022-10-24 05:27:55 -04:00
* debug 1.6.3
* The following default gems are now bundled gems.
## Compatibility issues
Note: Excluding feature bug fixes.
### Removed constants
2021-12-31 09:59:50 -05:00
2022-01-06 19:44:08 -05:00
The following deprecated constants are removed.
2022-01-02 01:05:02 -05:00
* `Fixnum` and `Bignum` [[Feature #12005]]
* `Random::DEFAULT` [[Feature #17351]]
2022-01-02 01:05:02 -05:00
* `Struct::Group`
* `Struct::Passwd`
### Removed methods
2021-12-31 09:59:50 -05:00
The following deprecated methods are removed.
* `Dir.exists?` [[Feature #17391]]
* `File.exists?` [[Feature #17391]]
* `Kernel#=~` [[Feature #15231]]
* `Kernel#taint`, `Kernel#untaint`, `Kernel#tainted?`
[[Feature #16131]]
* `Kernel#trust`, `Kernel#untrust`, `Kernel#untrusted?`
[[Feature #16131]]
2021-12-31 09:59:50 -05:00
## Stdlib compatibility issues
2020-06-18 08:11:19 -04:00
* `Psych` no longer bundles libyaml sources.
And also `Fiddle` no longer bundles libffi sources.
Users need to install the libyaml/libffi library themselves via the package
system. [[Feature #18571]]
## C API updates
2021-12-31 09:59:04 -05:00
### Removed C APIs
The following deprecated APIs are removed.
* `rb_cData` variable.
* "taintedness" and "trustedness" functions. [[Feature #16131]]
2021-12-31 09:59:04 -05:00
## Implementation improvements
* Fixed several race conditions in `Kernel#autoload`. [[Bug #18782]]
2022-10-06 11:37:16 -04:00
* Cache invalidation for expressions referencing constants is now
more fine-grained. `RubyVM.stat(:global_constant_state)` was
removed because it was closely tied to the previous caching scheme
where setting any constant invalidates all caches in the system.
New keys, `:constant_cache_invalidations` and `:constant_cache_misses`,
were introduced to help with use cases for `:global_constant_state`.
[[Feature #18589]]
## JIT
2022-09-01 17:12:24 -04:00
### YJIT
* Support arm64 / aarch64 on UNIX platforms.
* Building YJIT requires Rust 1.58.1+. [[Feature #18481]]
* Physical memory for JIT code is lazily allocated. Unlike Ruby 3.1,
the RSS of a Ruby process is minimized because virtual memory pages
allocated by `--yjit-exec-mem-size` will not be mapped to physical
memory pages until actually utilized by JIT code.
* Introduce Code GC that frees all code pages when the memory consumption
by JIT code reaches `--yjit-exec-mem-size`.
2022-09-01 17:12:24 -04:00
### MJIT
2021-10-20 15:51:07 -04:00
2022-10-26 01:26:20 -04:00
* The MJIT compiler is re-implemented in Ruby as a standard library `mjit`.
* MJIT compiler is executed under a forked Ruby process instead of
doing it in a native thread called MJIT worker. [[Feature #18968]]
* As a result, Microsoft Visual Studio (MSWIN) is no longer supported.
* MinGW is no longer supported. [[Feature #18824]]
2020-11-10 12:15:57 -05:00
## Static analysis
2020-10-20 00:16:19 -04:00
### RBS
2020-09-25 04:08:39 -04:00
2020-10-20 00:16:19 -04:00
### TypeProf
2021-10-19 21:18:54 -04:00
## Debugger
2021-10-19 22:05:05 -04:00
## error_highlight
## IRB Autocomplete and Document Display
## Miscellaneous changes
[Feature #12005]: https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/12005
[Feature #12084]: https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/12084
[Feature #12655]: https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/12655
2022-01-06 09:49:27 -05:00
[Feature #12737]: https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/12737
2022-02-20 10:44:05 -05:00
[Feature #13110]: https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/13110
2022-01-06 09:49:27 -05:00
[Feature #14332]: https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/14332
[Feature #15231]: https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/15231
[Feature #15357]: https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/15357
Fix constant assignment evaluation order Previously, the right hand side was always evaluated before the left hand side for constant assignments. For the following: ```ruby lhs::C = rhs ``` rhs was evaluated before lhs, which is inconsistant with attribute assignment (lhs.m = rhs), and apparently also does not conform to JIS 3017:2013 11.4.2.2.3. Fix this by changing evaluation order. Previously, the above compiled to: ``` 0000 putself ( 1)[Li] 0001 opt_send_without_block <calldata!mid:rhs, argc:0, FCALL|VCALL|ARGS_SIMPLE> 0003 dup 0004 putself 0005 opt_send_without_block <calldata!mid:lhs, argc:0, FCALL|VCALL|ARGS_SIMPLE> 0007 setconstant :C 0009 leave ``` After this change: ``` 0000 putself ( 1)[Li] 0001 opt_send_without_block <calldata!mid:lhs, argc:0, FCALL|VCALL|ARGS_SIMPLE> 0003 putself 0004 opt_send_without_block <calldata!mid:rhs, argc:0, FCALL|VCALL|ARGS_SIMPLE> 0006 swap 0007 topn 1 0009 swap 0010 setconstant :C 0012 leave ``` Note that if expr is not a module/class, then a TypeError is not raised until after the evaluation of rhs. This is because that error is raised by setconstant. If we wanted to raise TypeError before evaluation of rhs, we would have to add a VM instruction for calling vm_check_if_namespace. Changing assignment order for single assignments caused problems in the multiple assignment code, revealing that the issue also affected multiple assignment. Fix the multiple assignment code so left-to-right evaluation also works for constant assignments. Do some refactoring of the multiple assignment code to reduce duplication after adding support for constants. Rename struct masgn_attrasgn to masgn_lhs_node, since it now handles both constants and attributes. Add add_masgn_lhs_node static function for adding data for lhs attribute and constant setting. Fixes [Bug #15928]
2021-04-30 19:01:27 -04:00
[Bug #15928]: https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/15928
2022-10-29 11:53:10 -04:00
[Feature #16122]: https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/16122
[Feature #16131]: https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/16131
[Bug #16466]: https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/16466
[Feature #16806]: https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/16806
[Bug #16889]: https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/16889
[Bug #16908]: https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/16908
[Feature #16989]: https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/16989
[Feature #17351]: https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/17351
[Feature #17391]: https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/17391
2022-01-13 03:45:25 -05:00
[Bug #17545]: https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/17545
2022-01-18 08:57:21 -05:00
[Feature #17881]: https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/17881
2022-03-13 18:52:40 -04:00
[Feature #18037]: https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/18037
2022-08-21 23:18:58 -04:00
[Feature #18159]: https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/18159
[Feature #18351]: https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/18351
2022-10-29 11:53:10 -04:00
[Feature #18481]: https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/18481
[Bug #18487]: https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/18487
2022-03-27 21:59:35 -04:00
[Feature #18571]: https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/18571
[Feature #18585]: https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/18585
2022-10-29 11:53:10 -04:00
[Feature #18589]: https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/18589
2022-03-21 20:49:32 -04:00
[Feature #18598]: https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/18598
[Bug #18625]: https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/18625
2022-10-29 11:53:10 -04:00
[Feature #18630]: https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/18630
2022-03-30 14:39:27 -04:00
[Bug #18633]: https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/18633
2022-07-31 23:34:03 -04:00
[Feature #18685]: https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/18685
[Bug #18782]: https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/18782
[Feature #18788]: https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/18788
2022-08-12 22:23:47 -04:00
[Feature #18809]: https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/18809
2022-10-29 11:53:10 -04:00
[Feature #18821]: https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/18821
[Feature #18824]: https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/18824
[Feature #18949]: https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/18949
2022-10-29 11:53:10 -04:00
[Feature #18968]: https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/18968
[Feature #19008]: https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/19008
2022-10-29 11:53:10 -04:00
[Feature #19013]: https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/19013
[Feature #19026]: https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/19026
[Feature #19060]: https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/19060