mirror of
https://github.com/ruby/ruby.git
synced 2022-11-09 12:17:21 -05:00
329 lines
9.5 KiB
Groff
329 lines
9.5 KiB
Groff
.\"Ruby is copyrighted by Yukihiro Matsumoto <matz@ruby.club.co.jp>.
|
||
.\"
|
||
.\"This source is distributed under the conditions blow:
|
||
.\"
|
||
.\" 1. You may make and give away verbatim copies of the source form of
|
||
.\" the software without restriction, provided that you do not modify
|
||
.\" the original distribution files.
|
||
.\"
|
||
.\" If you want to distribute the modified version in any way, contact
|
||
.\" the author.
|
||
.\"
|
||
.\" 2. You may distribute the software in object code or executable
|
||
.\" form, provided that you distribute it with instructions on where
|
||
.\" to get the software.
|
||
.\"
|
||
.\" 3. You may modify the software in any way, provided that you do not
|
||
.\" distribute the modified version.
|
||
.\"
|
||
.\" 4. You may modify and include the part of the software into any other
|
||
.\" software (possibly commercial). But some files in the distribution
|
||
.\" are not written by the author, so that they are not under this terms.
|
||
.\" They are gc.c(partly)$B!$(Butils.c(partly), regex.[ch]$B!$(Bfnmatch.[ch]$B!$(B
|
||
.\" glob.c, st.[ch] and somme files under the ./missing directory. See
|
||
.\" each files for the copying condition.
|
||
.\"
|
||
.\" 5. The scripts and library files supplied as input to or produced as
|
||
.\" output from the software do not automatically fall under the
|
||
.\" copyright of the software, but belong to whomever generated them,
|
||
.\" and may be sold commercially, and may be aggregated with this
|
||
.\" software.
|
||
.\"
|
||
.\" 6. THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND WITHOUT ANY EXPRESS OR
|
||
.\" IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, WITHOUT LIMITATION, THE IMPLIED
|
||
.\" WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR
|
||
.\" PURPOSE.
|
||
.\"
|
||
.\" $Id$
|
||
.\"
|
||
.na
|
||
.TH RUBY 1 "ruby 1.0" "19/Sep/97" "Ruby Programmers Reference Guide"
|
||
.SH NAME
|
||
ruby - Interpreted scripting language
|
||
.SH SYNOPSIS
|
||
.B ruby \c
|
||
[ \c
|
||
.BI -version \c
|
||
] [ \c
|
||
.BI -c \c
|
||
] [ \c
|
||
.BI -w \c
|
||
] [ \c
|
||
.BI -d \c
|
||
] [ \c
|
||
.BI -l \c
|
||
]
|
||
[ \c
|
||
.BI -p \c
|
||
] [ \c
|
||
.BI -n \c
|
||
] [ \c
|
||
.BI -a \c
|
||
] [ \c
|
||
.BI -s \c
|
||
] [ \c
|
||
.BI -0 "[digit]"\c
|
||
]
|
||
[ \c
|
||
.BI -K "c"\c
|
||
] [ \c
|
||
.BI -e "script"\c
|
||
] [ \c
|
||
.BI -F "pattern"\c
|
||
]
|
||
[ \c
|
||
.BI -i "[extension]"\c
|
||
] [ \c
|
||
.BI -I "dir"\c
|
||
] [ \c
|
||
.BI -r "filename"\c
|
||
]
|
||
[ \c
|
||
.BI -S \c
|
||
] [ \c
|
||
.BI -v \c
|
||
] [ \c
|
||
.BI -x "[dir]"\c
|
||
] [ \c
|
||
.BI -X "[dir]"\c
|
||
] [ \c
|
||
.BI -y \c
|
||
]
|
||
[ \c
|
||
.BI -- \c
|
||
] [ programfile ] [ argument ] ...
|
||
|
||
.SH PREFACE
|
||
Ruby is the interpreted scripting language for quick and easy
|
||
object-oriented programming. It has many features to process text
|
||
files and to do system management tasks (as in perl). It is simple,
|
||
straight-forward, and extensible.
|
||
.PP
|
||
If you want a language for easy object-oriented programming, or you
|
||
don't like the PERL ugliness, or you do like the concept of lisp, but
|
||
don't like too much parentheses, ruby may be the language of the
|
||
choice.
|
||
.SH DESCRIPTION
|
||
Ruby's features are as follows:
|
||
.TP
|
||
.B "\(bu Interpretive"
|
||
Ruby is the interpreted language, so you don't have to
|
||
recompile to execute the program written in ruby.
|
||
.TP
|
||
.B "\(bu Variables have no type (dynamic typing)"
|
||
Variables in ruby can contain data of any type. You don't have
|
||
to worry about variable typing. Consequently, it has weaker
|
||
compile time check.
|
||
.TP
|
||
.B "\(bu No declaration needed"
|
||
You can use variables in your ruby programs without any
|
||
declarations. Variable name itself denotes its scope (local,
|
||
global, instance, etc.)
|
||
.TP
|
||
.B "\(bu Simple syntax"
|
||
Ruby has simple syntax influenced slightly from Eiffel.
|
||
.TP
|
||
.B "\(bu No user-level memory management"
|
||
Ruby has automatic memory management. Objects no longer
|
||
referenced from anywhere are automatically collected by the
|
||
garbage collector built in the interpreter.
|
||
.TP
|
||
.B "\(bu Everything is object"
|
||
Ruby is the pure object-oriented language from the beginning.
|
||
Even basic data like integers are treated uniformly as objects.
|
||
.TP
|
||
.B "\(bu Class, inheritance, methods"
|
||
Of course, as a O-O language, ruby has basic features like
|
||
classes, inheritance, methods, etc.
|
||
.TP
|
||
.B "\(bu Singleton methods"
|
||
Ruby has the feature to define methods for certain specified
|
||
object. For example, you can define a press-button action for
|
||
certain GUI button by defining a singleton method for the
|
||
button. Or, you can make up your own prototype based object
|
||
system using singleton methods (if you want to).
|
||
.TP
|
||
.B "\(bu Mix-in by modules"
|
||
Ruby does not have the multiple inheritance intentionally. IMO,
|
||
It is the source of confusion. Instead, ruby has modules to
|
||
share the implementation across the inheritance tree. It is
|
||
often called "Mix-in."
|
||
.TP
|
||
.B "\(bu Iterators"
|
||
Ruby has iterators for loop abstraction.
|
||
.TP
|
||
.B "\(bu Closures"
|
||
In ruby, you can objectify the procedure.
|
||
.TP
|
||
.B "\(bu Text processing and regular expression"
|
||
Ruby has bunch of text processing features like in perl.
|
||
.TP
|
||
.B "\(bu Bignums"
|
||
With bu ilt-in bignums, you can calculate factorial(400), for
|
||
example.
|
||
.TP
|
||
.B "\(bu Exception handling"
|
||
As in Java(tm).
|
||
.TP
|
||
.B "\(bu Direct access to OS"
|
||
Ruby can call most of system calls on UNIX boxes. It can be
|
||
used in system programming.
|
||
.TP
|
||
.B "\(bu Dynamic loading"
|
||
You can load object files into ruby interpreter on-the-fly, on
|
||
most of UNIXes.
|
||
.PP
|
||
.SH Command line options
|
||
Ruby interpreter accepts following command-line options (switches).
|
||
Basically they are quite similar to those of Perl.
|
||
.TP
|
||
.B -0digit
|
||
specifies the input record separator ($/) as an octal number.
|
||
If no digits given, the null character is the separator. Other
|
||
switches may follow the digits. -00 turns ruby into paragraph
|
||
mode. -0777 makes ruby read whole file at once as a single
|
||
string, since there is no legal character with that value.
|
||
.TP
|
||
.B -a
|
||
turns on auto-split mode when used with -n or -p. In auto-split
|
||
mode, ruby executes
|
||
.nf
|
||
.ne 1
|
||
\& $F = $_.split
|
||
at beginning of each loop.
|
||
.fi
|
||
.TP
|
||
.B -c
|
||
causes ruby to check the syntax of the script and exit without
|
||
executing. If there is no syntax error, ruby will print "Syntax
|
||
OK" to the standard output.
|
||
.TP
|
||
.B -Kc
|
||
specifies KANJI (Japanese character) code-set.
|
||
.TP
|
||
.B
|
||
-d --debug
|
||
turns on debug mode. $DEBUG will set TRUE.
|
||
.TP
|
||
.B -e script
|
||
specifies script from command-line. if -e switch specified,
|
||
ruby will not look for a script filename in the arguments.
|
||
.TP
|
||
.B -F regexp
|
||
specifies input field separator ($;).
|
||
.TP
|
||
.B -i extension
|
||
specifies in-place-edit mode. The extension, if specified, is
|
||
added to old filename to make a backup copy.
|
||
example:
|
||
.nf
|
||
.ne 8
|
||
\& % echo matz > /tmp/junk
|
||
\& % cat /tmp/junk
|
||
\& matz
|
||
\& % ruby -p -i.bak -e '$_.upcase!' /tmp/junk
|
||
\& % cat /tmp/junk
|
||
\& MATZ
|
||
\& % cat /tmp/junk.bak
|
||
\& matz
|
||
.fi
|
||
.TP
|
||
.B -I directory
|
||
used to tell ruby where to load the library scripts. Directory
|
||
path will be added to the load-path variable ($:').
|
||
.TP
|
||
.B -l
|
||
enables automatic line-ending processing, which means firstly
|
||
set $\ to the value of $/, and secondly chops every line read
|
||
using chop!.
|
||
.TP
|
||
.B -n
|
||
causes ruby to assume the following loop around your script,
|
||
which makes it iterate over filename arguments somewhat like
|
||
sed -n or awk.
|
||
.nf
|
||
.ne 3
|
||
\& while gets
|
||
\& ...
|
||
\& end
|
||
.fi
|
||
.TP
|
||
.B -p
|
||
acts mostly same as -n switch, but print the value of variable
|
||
$_ at the each end of the loop.
|
||
example:
|
||
.nf
|
||
.ne 2
|
||
\& % echo matz | ruby -p -e '$_.tr! "a-z", "A-Z"'
|
||
\& MATZ
|
||
.fi
|
||
.TP
|
||
.B -r filename
|
||
causes ruby to load the file using [4]require. It is useful
|
||
with switches -n or -p.
|
||
.TP
|
||
.B -s
|
||
enables some switch parsing for switches after script name but
|
||
before any filename arguments (or before a --). Any switches
|
||
found there is removed from ARGV and set the corresponding
|
||
variable in the script.
|
||
example:
|
||
.nf
|
||
.ne 3
|
||
\& #! /usr/local/bin/ruby -s
|
||
\& # prints "true" if invoked with `-xyz' switch.
|
||
\& print "true\n" if $xyz
|
||
.fi
|
||
.TP
|
||
.B -S
|
||
makes ruby uses the PATH environment variable to search for
|
||
script, unless if its name begins with a slash. This is used to
|
||
emulate #! on machines that don't support it, in the following
|
||
manner:
|
||
.nf
|
||
.ne 2
|
||
\& #! /usr/local/bin/ruby
|
||
\& # This line makes the next one a comment in ruby \\
|
||
\& exec /usr/local/bin/ruby -S $0 $*
|
||
.fi
|
||
On some systems $0 does not always contain the full pathname,
|
||
so you need -S switch to tell ruby to search for the script if
|
||
necessary.
|
||
To handle embedded spaces or such, A better construct than $*
|
||
would be ${1+"$@"}, but it does not work if the script is being
|
||
interpreted by csh.
|
||
.TP
|
||
.B -v --verbose
|
||
enables verbose mode. Ruby will prints its version at the
|
||
beginning, and set the variable `$VERBOSE' to TRUE. Some
|
||
methods prints extra messages if this variable is TRUE. If this
|
||
switch is given, and no other switches present, ruby quits
|
||
after printing its version.
|
||
.TP
|
||
.B --version
|
||
prints the version of ruby executable.
|
||
.TP
|
||
.B -w
|
||
enables verbose mode without printing version message at the
|
||
beginning. It set the variable `$VERBOSE' to TRUE.
|
||
.TP
|
||
.B -x[directory]
|
||
tells ruby that the script is embedded in a message. Leading
|
||
garbage will be discarded until the first that starts with "#!"
|
||
and contains string "ruby". Any meaningful switches on that
|
||
line will applied. The end of script must be specified with
|
||
either EOF, ^D (control-D), ^Z (control-Z), or reserved word
|
||
__END__.If the directory name is specified, ruby will switch to
|
||
that directory before executing script.
|
||
.TP
|
||
.B -X directory
|
||
causes ruby to switch to the directory.
|
||
.TP
|
||
.B -y --yydebug
|
||
turns on compiler debug mode. ruby will print bunch of internal
|
||
state messages during compiling scripts. You don't have to
|
||
specify this switch, unless you are going to debug the ruby
|
||
interpreter itself.
|
||
.PP
|
||
.SH AUTHOR
|
||
Ruby is designed and implemented by Yukihiro Matsumoto <matz@ruby.club.co.jp>.
|