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26b7efc51c
Must not be a bad idea to improve documents. [ci skip]
353 lines
14 KiB
C++
353 lines
14 KiB
C++
#ifndef RBIMPL_INTERN_PROC_H /*-*-C++-*-vi:se ft=cpp:*/
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#define RBIMPL_INTERN_PROC_H
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/**
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* @file
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* @author Ruby developers <ruby-core@ruby-lang.org>
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* @copyright This file is a part of the programming language Ruby.
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* Permission is hereby granted, to either redistribute and/or
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* modify this file, provided that the conditions mentioned in the
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* file COPYING are met. Consult the file for details.
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* @warning Symbols prefixed with either `RBIMPL` or `rbimpl` are
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* implementation details. Don't take them as canon. They could
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* rapidly appear then vanish. The name (path) of this header file
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* is also an implementation detail. Do not expect it to persist
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* at the place it is now. Developers are free to move it anywhere
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* anytime at will.
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* @note To ruby-core: remember that this header can be possibly
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* recursively included from extension libraries written in C++.
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* Do not expect for instance `__VA_ARGS__` is always available.
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* We assume C99 for ruby itself but we don't assume languages of
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* extension libraries. They could be written in C++98.
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* @brief Public APIs related to ::rb_cProc.
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*/
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#include "ruby/internal/dllexport.h"
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#include "ruby/internal/iterator.h"
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#include "ruby/internal/value.h"
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RBIMPL_SYMBOL_EXPORT_BEGIN()
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/* proc.c */
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/**
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* Constructs a Proc object from implicitly passed components. When a ruby
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* method is called with a block, that block is not explicitly passed around
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* using C level function parameters. This function gathers all the necessary
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* info to turn them into a Ruby level instance of ::rb_cProc.
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*
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* @exception rb_eArgError There is no passed block.
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* @return An instance of ::rb_cProc.
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*/
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VALUE rb_block_proc(void);
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/**
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* Identical to rb_proc_new(), except it returns a lambda.
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*
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* @exception rb_eArgError There is no passed block.
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* @return An instance of ::rb_cProc.
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*/
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VALUE rb_block_lambda(void);
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/**
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* This is an rb_iterate() + rb_block_proc() combo.
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*
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* ```CXX
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* VALUE
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* my_own_iterator(RB_BLOCK_CALL_FUNC_ARGLIST(y, c))
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* {
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* const auto plus = rb_intern("+");
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* return rb_funcall(c, plus, 1, y);
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* }
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*
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* VALUE
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* my_own_method(VALUE self)
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* {
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* return rb_proc_new(my_own_iterator, self);
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* }
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* ```
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*
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* @param[in] func A backend function of a proc.
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* @param[in] callback_arg Passed to `func`'s callback_arg.
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* @return A C-backended proc object.
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*
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*/
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VALUE rb_proc_new(rb_block_call_func_t func, VALUE callback_arg);
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/**
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* Queries if the given object is a proc.
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*
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* @note This is about the object's data structure, not its class etc.
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* @param[in] recv Object in question.
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* @retval RUBY_Qtrue It is a proc.
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* @retval RUBY_Qfalse Otherwise.
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*/
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VALUE rb_obj_is_proc(VALUE recv);
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/**
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* Evaluates the passed proc with the passed arguments.
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*
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* @param[in] recv The proc to call.
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* @param[in] args An instance of ::RArray which is the arguments.
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* @exception rb_eException Any exceptions happen inside.
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* @return What the proc evaluates to.
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*/
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VALUE rb_proc_call(VALUE recv, VALUE args);
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/**
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* Identical to rb_proc_call(), except you can specify how to handle the last
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* element of the given array.
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*
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* @param[in] recv The proc to call.
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* @param[in] args An instance of ::RArray which is the arguments.
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* @param[in] kw_splat Handling of keyword parameters:
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* - RB_NO_KEYWORDS `args`' last is not a keyword argument.
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* - RB_PASS_KEYWORDS `args`' last is a keyword argument.
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* - RB_PASS_CALLED_KEYWORDS it depends if there is a passed block.
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* @exception rb_eException Any exceptions happen inside.
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* @return What the proc evaluates to.
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*/
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VALUE rb_proc_call_kw(VALUE recv, VALUE args, int kw_splat);
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/**
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* Identical to rb_proc_call(), except you can additionally pass another proc
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* object, as a block. Nowadays procs can take blocks:
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*
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* ```ruby
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* l = -> (positional, optional=nil, *rest, kwarg:, **kwrest, &block) {
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* # ... how can we pass this `&block`? ^^^^^^
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* }
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* ```
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*
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* And this function is to pass one to such procs.
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*
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* @param[in] recv The proc to call.
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* @param[in] argc Number of arguments.
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* @param[in] argv Arbitrary number of proc arguments.
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* @param[in] proc Proc as a passed block.
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* @exception rb_eException Any exceptions happen inside.
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* @return What the proc evaluates to.
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*/
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VALUE rb_proc_call_with_block(VALUE recv, int argc, const VALUE *argv, VALUE proc);
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/**
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* Identical to rb_proc_call_with_block(), except you can specify how to handle
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* the last element of the given array. It can also be seen as a routine
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* identical to rb_proc_call_kw(), except you can additionally pass another
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* proc object as a block.
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*
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* @param[in] recv The proc to call.
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* @param[in] argc Number of arguments.
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* @param[in] argv Arbitrary number of proc arguments.
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* @param[in] proc Proc as a passed block.
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* @param[in] kw_splat Handling of keyword parameters:
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* - RB_NO_KEYWORDS `args`' last is not a keyword argument.
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* - RB_PASS_KEYWORDS `args`' last is a keyword argument.
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* - RB_PASS_CALLED_KEYWORDS it depends if there is a passed block.
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* @exception rb_eException Any exceptions happen inside.
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* @return What the proc evaluates to.
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*/
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VALUE rb_proc_call_with_block_kw(VALUE recv, int argc, const VALUE *argv, VALUE proc, int kw_splat);
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/**
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* Queries the number of mandatory arguments of the given Proc. If its block
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* is declared to take no arguments, returns `0`. If the block is known to
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* take exactly `n` arguments, returns `n`. If the block has optional
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* arguments, returns `-n-1`, where `n` is the number of mandatory arguments,
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* with the exception for blocks that are not lambdas and have only a finite
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* number of optional arguments; in this latter case, returns `n`. Keyword
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* arguments will be considered as a single additional argument, that argument
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* being mandatory if any keyword argument is mandatory.
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*
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* @param[in] recv Target Proc object.
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* @retval 0 It takes no arguments.
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* @retval >0 It takes exactly this number of arguments.
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* @retval <0 It takes optional arguments.
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*/
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int rb_proc_arity(VALUE recv);
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/**
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* Queries if the given object is a lambda. Instances of ::rb_cProc are either
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* lambda or proc. They differ in several points. This function can
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* distinguish them without actually evaluating their contents.
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*
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* @param[in] recv Target proc object.
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* @retval RUBY_Qtrue It is a lambda.
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* @retval RUBY_Qfalse Otherwise.
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*/
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VALUE rb_proc_lambda_p(VALUE recv);
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/**
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* Snapshots the current execution context and turn it into an instance of
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* ::rb_cBinding.
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*
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* @return An instance of ::rb_cBinding.
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*/
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VALUE rb_binding_new(void);
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/**
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* Creates a method object. A method object is a proc-like object that you can
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* "call". Note that a method object snapshots the method at the time the
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* object is created:
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*
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* ```ruby
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* class Foo
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* def foo
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* return 1
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* end
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* end
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*
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* obj = Foo.new.method(:foo)
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*
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* class Foo
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* def foo
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* return 2
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* end
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* end
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*
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* obj.call # => 1, not 2.
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* ```
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*
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* @param[in] recv Receiver of the method.
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* @param[in] mid Method name, in either String or Symbol.
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* @exception rb_eNoMethodError No such method.
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* @return An instance of ::rb_cMethod.
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*/
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VALUE rb_obj_method(VALUE recv, VALUE mid);
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/**
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* Queries if the given object is a method.
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*
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* @note This is about the object's data structure, not its class etc.
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* @param[in] recv Object in question.
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* @retval RUBY_Qtrue It is a method.
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* @retval RUBY_Qfalse Otherwise.
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*/
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VALUE rb_obj_is_method(VALUE recv);
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/**
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* Evaluates the passed method with the passed arguments.
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*
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* @param[in] argc Number of objects of `argv`.
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* @param[in] argv Arbitrary number of method arguments.
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* @param[in] recv The method object to call.
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* @exception rb_eTypeError `recv` is not a method.
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* @exception rb_eException Any exceptions happen inside.
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* @return What the method returns.
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*/
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VALUE rb_method_call(int argc, const VALUE *argv, VALUE recv);
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/**
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* Identical to rb_method_call(), except you can specify how to handle the last
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* element of the given array.
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*
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* @param[in] argc Number of objects of `argv`.
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* @param[in] argv Arbitrary number of method arguments.
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* @param[in] recv The method object to call.
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* @param[in] kw_splat Handling of keyword parameters:
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* - RB_NO_KEYWORDS `args`' last is not a keyword argument.
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* - RB_PASS_KEYWORDS `args`' last is a keyword argument.
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* - RB_PASS_CALLED_KEYWORDS it depends if there is a passed block.
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* @exception rb_eTypeError `recv` is not a method.
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* @exception rb_eException Any exceptions happen inside.
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* @return What the method returns.
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*/
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VALUE rb_method_call_kw(int argc, const VALUE *argv, VALUE recv, int kw_splat);
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/**
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* Identical to rb_proc_call(), except you can additionally pass a proc as a
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* block.
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*
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* @param[in] argc Number of objects of `argv`.
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* @param[in] argv Arbitrary number of method arguments.
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* @param[in] recv The method object to call.
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* @param[in] proc Proc as a passed block.
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* @exception rb_eTypeError `recv` is not a method.
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* @exception rb_eException Any exceptions happen inside.
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* @return What the method returns.
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*/
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VALUE rb_method_call_with_block(int argc, const VALUE *argv, VALUE recv, VALUE proc);
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/**
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* Identical to rb_method_call_with_block(), except you can specify how to
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* handle the last element of the given array. It can also be seen as a
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* routine identical to rb_method_call_kw(), except you can additionally pass
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* another proc object as a block.
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*
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* @param[in] argc Number of objects of `argv`.
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* @param[in] argv Arbitrary number of method arguments.
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* @param[in] recv The method object to call.
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* @param[in] proc Proc as a passed block.
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* @param[in] kw_splat Handling of keyword parameters:
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* - RB_NO_KEYWORDS `args`' last is not a keyword argument.
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* - RB_PASS_KEYWORDS `args`' last is a keyword argument.
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* - RB_PASS_CALLED_KEYWORDS it depends if there is a passed block.
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* @exception rb_eTypeError `recv` is not a method.
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* @exception rb_eException Any exceptions happen inside.
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* @return What the method returns.
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*/
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VALUE rb_method_call_with_block_kw(int argc, const VALUE *argv, VALUE recv, VALUE proc, int kw_splat);
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/**
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* Queries the number of mandatory arguments of the method defined in the given
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* module. If it is declared to take no arguments, returns `0`. If it takes
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* exactly `n` arguments, returns `n`. If it has optional arguments, returns
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* `-n-1`, where `n` is the number of mandatory arguments. Keyword arguments
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* will be considered as a single additional argument, that argument being
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* mandatory if any keyword argument is mandatory.
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*
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* @param[in] mod Namespace to search a method for.
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* @param[in] mid Method id.
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* @retval 0 It takes no arguments.
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* @retval >0 It takes exactly this number of arguments.
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* @retval <0 It takes optional arguments.
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*/
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int rb_mod_method_arity(VALUE mod, ID mid);
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/**
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* Identical to rb_mod_method_arity(), except it searches for singleton methods
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* rather than instance methods.
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*
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* @param[in] obj Object to search for a singleton method.
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* @param[in] mid Method id.
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* @retval 0 It takes no arguments.
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* @retval >0 It takes exactly this number of arguments.
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* @retval <0 It takes optional arguments.
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*/
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int rb_obj_method_arity(VALUE obj, ID mid);
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/* eval.c */
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RBIMPL_ATTR_NONNULL((1))
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/**
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* Protects a function call from potential global escapes from the function.
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* Such global escapes include exceptions, `throw`, `break`, for example.
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*
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* It first calls the function func with `args` as the argument. If no global
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* escape occurred during the function, it returns the result and `*state` is
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* zero. Otherwise, it returns ::RUBY_Qnil and sets `*state` to nonzero. If
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* `state` is `NULL`, it is not set in both cases.
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*
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* @param[in] func A function that potentially escapes globally.
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* @param[in] args Passed as-is to `func`.
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* @param[out] state State of execution.
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* @return What `func` returns, or an undefined value when it did not
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* return.
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* @post `*state` is set to zero if succeeded. Nonzero otherwise.
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* @warning You have to clear the error info with `rb_set_errinfo(Qnil)` if
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* you decide to ignore the caught exception.
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* @see rb_eval_string_protect()
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* @see rb_load_protect()
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*
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* @internal
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*
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* The "undefined value" described above is in fact ::RUBY_Qnil for now. But
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* @shyouhei doesn't think that we would never change that.
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*
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* Though not a part of our public API, `state` is in fact an
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* enum ruby_tag_type. You can see the potential "nonzero" values by looking
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* at vm_core.h.
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*/
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VALUE rb_protect(VALUE (*func)(VALUE args), VALUE args, int *state);
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RBIMPL_SYMBOL_EXPORT_END()
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#endif /* RBIMPL_INTERN_PROC_H */
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