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* object.c (Kernel#<=>) surround Comparable operators with <code> tags.

The #== method was hidden in ri/rdoc's output and was highlighting
  the line instead.

git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@44452 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
This commit is contained in:
eregon 2013-12-28 13:22:42 +00:00
parent 75f4731f90
commit 58a60b264d
2 changed files with 10 additions and 4 deletions

View file

@ -1,3 +1,9 @@
Sat Dec 28 22:21:59 2013 Benoit Daloze <eregontp@gmail.com>
* object.c (Kernel#<=>) surround Comparable operators with <code> tags.
The #== method was hidden in ri/rdoc's output and was highlighting
the line instead.
Sat Dec 28 17:24:00 2013 DV Suresh <e@dvsuresh.me>
* benchmark/bm_so_meteor_contest.rb: [DOC] Fix a few typos

View file

@ -1403,16 +1403,16 @@ rb_obj_not_match(VALUE obj1, VALUE obj2)
* Returns 0 if +obj+ and +other+ are the same object
* or <code>obj == other</code>, otherwise nil.
*
* The <=> is used by various methods to compare objects, for example
* The <code><=></code> is used by various methods to compare objects, for example
* Enumerable#sort, Enumerable#max etc.
*
* Your implementation of <=> should return one of the following values: -1, 0,
* Your implementation of <code><=></code> should return one of the following values: -1, 0,
* 1 or nil. -1 means self is smaller than other. 0 means self is equal to other.
* 1 means self is bigger than other. Nil means the two values could not be
* compared.
*
* When you define <=>, you can include Comparable to gain the methods <=, <,
* ==, >=, > and between?.
* When you define <code><=></code>, you can include Comparable to gain the methods
* <code><=</code>, <code><</code>, <code>==</code>, <code>>=</code>, <code>></code> and <code>between?</code>.
*/
static VALUE
rb_obj_cmp(VALUE obj1, VALUE obj2)