[#321574] Regular Expressions — Mmcolli00 Mom <mmc_collins@...>

Hi everyone.

15 messages 2008/12/01

[#321655] Ruby cgi script — ZippySwish <fischer.jan@...>

I put "script.rb" into the cgi-bin folder of my webhost, but nothing's

12 messages 2008/12/02

[#321733] FFI 0.2.0 — "Wayne Meissner" <wmeissner@...>

Greetings Rubyists.

20 messages 2008/12/03

[#321920] Force a program to stop if runtime exceeds given duration — Aldric Giacomoni <"aldric[remove]"@...>

Any idea how to do that?

25 messages 2008/12/04
[#321924] Re: Force a program to stop if runtime exceeds given duration — "Glen Holcomb" <damnbigman@...> 2008/12/04

On Thu, Dec 4, 2008 at 10:04 AM, Aldric Giacomoni <"aldric[remove]"@

[#322011] Re: Force a program to stop if runtime exceeds given duration — Ron Fox <fox@...> 2008/12/05

See http://www.ruby-doc.org/core-1.9/classes/Process.html#M003012

[#322016] Re: Force a program to stop if runtime exceeds given duration — Aldric Giacomoni <"aldric[remove]"@...> 2008/12/05

Everybody automatically assumes that rubyists are using Linux - sadly,

[#321969] Are there any Ruby Technical Writers here? — Vito Fontaine <vito.matro@...>

I am a beginner with Ruby who was interested in writing some programs.

15 messages 2008/12/04
[#321975] Re: Are there any Ruby Technical Writers here? — Robert Klemme <shortcutter@...> 2008/12/04

On 04.12.2008 22:43, Vito Fontaine wrote:

[#321984] Re: Are there any Ruby Technical Writers here? — Vito Fontaine <vito.matro@...> 2008/12/05

Robert Klemme wrote:

[#322014] Proximity searches in Ruby — Stuart Clarke <stuart.clarke1986@...>

Does Ruby have the ability to perform proximity searches on data. For

14 messages 2008/12/05
[#322056] Re: Proximity searches in Ruby — Ilan Berci <coder68@...> 2008/12/05

No proximity searches with 1.8.. you would need a full fledged text

[#322073] shoes 2 (raisins) is go. — _why <why@...>

Salutations and hi.

13 messages 2008/12/06

[#322260] Help on algorythm — Helder Oliveira <hrpoliveira@...>

Guys i have been trying to make this algorythm but with no sucess, can

13 messages 2008/12/09
[#322261] Re: Help on algorythm — "Glen Holcomb" <damnbigman@...> 2008/12/09

On Tue, Dec 9, 2008 at 7:44 AM, Helder Oliveira <hrpoliveira@gmail.com>wrote:

[#322283] Completely new programmer lacks direction — Cameron Carroll <ubernoobs@...>

Hi. I recently picked up a beginning ruby book, having only lightly

17 messages 2008/12/09

[#322285] compare 2 text files - check for difference - Please help — Mmcolli00 Mom <mmc_collins@...>

Hi. I want to take two files that are supposed to be identical, then ook

12 messages 2008/12/09
[#322301] Re: compare 2 text files - check for difference - Please help — Brian Candler <b.candler@...> 2008/12/09

Mmcolli00 Mom wrote:

[#322306] Re: compare 2 text files - check for difference - Please help — Mmcolli00 Mom <mmc_collins@...> 2008/12/09

require 'diff/lcs/Array'

[#322417] why Hash corrupts 'key' object ? — Dmitry Perfilyev <dmitry1976@...>

Hi, I have next script:

13 messages 2008/12/10

[#322464] Q: FFI and C++? — Jeremy Henty <onepoint@...>

If I want to wrap a C++ library using FFI, can it cope with the name

14 messages 2008/12/11

[#322516] Invoking Ruby code from a low-level language? — Alex Fulton <a.fulton@...>

Hi, my sincerest apologies if this question has already been answered

11 messages 2008/12/11

[#322529] parallel method return value — Louis-Philippe <default@...>

Hi all,

17 messages 2008/12/12

[#322566] How to run background processes (more than 1 worker) parallely. — "Deepak Gole" <deepak.gole8@...>

Hi

10 messages 2008/12/12

[#322624] singleton methods vs. meta instance methods — Daniel DeLorme <dan-ml@...42.com>

If I understand the ruby object model correctly, then an object's

15 messages 2008/12/13

[#322705] ruby 1.9.1: Encoding trouble: broken US-ASCII String — Tom Link <micathom@...>

Hi,

22 messages 2008/12/14

[#322710] Help with an "easy" regular expression substitution — Iñaki Baz Castillo <ibc@...>

Hi, I'm getting crazy to get a theorically easy substitution:

16 messages 2008/12/14

[#322819] Pure Ruby Zlib::GzipWriter — Daniel Berger <djberg96@...>

Hi,

53 messages 2008/12/15
[#324442] Re: Pure Ruby Zlib::GzipWriter — Luis Lavena <luislavena@...> 2009/01/10

On Jan 9, 9:26m, "Charles L." <aquas...@gmail.com> wrote:

[#323877] Re: Pure Ruby Zlib::GzipWriter — Daniel Berger <djberg96@...> 2009/01/03

[#323903] Re: Pure Ruby Zlib::GzipWriter — Roger Pack <rogerpack2005@...> 2009/01/04

[#324011] Re: Pure Ruby Zlib::GzipWriter — Daniel Berger <djberg96@...> 2009/01/05

[#322987] Using ruby hash on array — Stuart Clarke <stuart.clarke1986@...>

I would like to process some data from an array and using hash to

14 messages 2008/12/17

[#323085] Ruby and Rails supported on 10gen — "Jim Menard" <jim.menard@...>

http://www.10gen.com/blog/2008/12/ruby-support-on-10gen

11 messages 2008/12/18

[#323166] Dreaming of a Ruby Christmas (#187) — Matthew Moss <matt@...>

-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-

11 messages 2008/12/19

[#323204] get first and last line from txt file - how? — Mmcolli00 Mom <mmc_collins@...>

I have txt file with date/time stamps only. I want to grab the first

19 messages 2008/12/20
[#323205] Re: get first and last line from txt file - how? — Tim Hunter <TimHunter@...> 2008/12/20

Mmcolli00 Mom wrote:

[#323207] Re: get first and last line from txt file - how? — "Yaser Sulaiman" <yaserbuntu@...> 2008/12/20

I'm just wondering..

[#323273] how to make installing Ruby easier for amateurs — Tom Cloyd <tomcloyd@...>

Greetings!

21 messages 2008/12/22

[#323312] Name that data structure! — Simon Chiang <simon.a.chiang@...>

I'm using a data structure that I'm sure has been implemented and

18 messages 2008/12/22
[#323314] Re: Name that data structure! — "Gregory Brown" <gregory.t.brown@...> 2008/12/22

On Mon, Dec 22, 2008 at 5:38 PM, Simon Chiang <simon.a.chiang@gmail.com> wrote:

[#323342] Are all Ruby built-in objects thread safe? — "Just Another Victim of the Ambient Morality" <ihatespam@...>

Are all built-in objects thread safe? For example, if I have an array

23 messages 2008/12/23
[#323346] Re: Are all Ruby built-in objects thread safe? — Yukihiro Matsumoto <matz@...> 2008/12/23

Hi,

[#323519] What does 'Monkey Patching' exactly Mean in Ruby? — "Yaser Sulaiman" <yaserbuntu@...>

According to Wikipedia, a monkey patch[1] is:

36 messages 2008/12/27
[#323813] Re: What does 'Monkey Patching' exactly Mean in Ruby? — Jg W Mittag <JoergWMittag+Usenet@...> 2009/01/02

Phlip wrote:

[#323832] Re: What does 'Monkey Patching' exactly Mean in Ruby? — "David A. Black" <dblack@...> 2009/01/02

Hi --

[#323644] Why Ruby? — Mike Stephens <rubfor@...>

I have never seen or heard of Ruby in a corporate context. The single

35 messages 2008/12/30

[#323668] Ruby 1.9.1 RC1 is released — "Yugui (Yuki Sonoda)" <yugui@...>

Hi, folks

21 messages 2008/12/30

[ANN] FFI 0.2.0

From: "Wayne Meissner" <wmeissner@...>
Date: 2008-12-03 01:09:03 UTC
List: ruby-talk #321733
Greetings Rubyists.

The JRuby team is proud to announce the release of 0.2.0 of FFI for
Ruby.  This release is compatible with the FFI implementation released
in JRuby 1.1.6

Get it via 'gem install ffi' or download the source and/or gem files
from the project page at http://kenai.com/projects/ruby-ffi

Special thanks to:

Yehuda Katz
Luc  Heinrich
Andrea Fazzi
Mike Dalessio
Hongli Lai



Highlights of changes since 0.1.1:

- About 25% faster function invocation.  This is probably not that
important, since as soon as you start putting significant ruby code
around any native call, the native call overhead becomes a bit of a
wash.  Still, the first thing people do is benchmarks, so speeding it
up a bit was probably worth it.

- type definitions for size_t, ssize_t, etc autogenerated when ffi gem
is installed.

- variadic function support (from Luc Heinrich <luc@honk-honk.com>)

- nil can be passed as a string argument (from Luc Heinrich
<luc@honk-honk.com>)

- FFI libraries can now be mixed in to other modules. (from Luc
Heinrich <luc@honk-honk.com>)

- uses system libffi if it is new enough.  This really only works
under very recent linux distributions and libffi from macports.

- Better library name mangling.  Now when an absolute path is set as
ffi_lib, no name mangling occurs.  Also on Linux, if you request 'c'
or 'libc.so' as the library, it is converted into 'libc.so.6'

- Multiple libraries can be specified.  This is once again, useful on
linux, where you have to specify the exact version of a library, but
you want it to work on other platforms too.  e.g. ffi_lib 'ncurses',
'libncurses.so.5'

- Many, many more specs.  Most specs now run against the included
libtest native library.  It is still a long way from 100% test
coverage, but its better than 0.1 was.

- Better tainted string handling.  All strings originating in native
code - i.e. returned from a function, or obtained from a pointer or
buffer via get_string() are tainted.  If a tainted string is passed to
a native function, an error is raised.

- automatic Struct layout.  This means you can specify the layout as
an array of name, type pairs and the offset and size will be
automatically calculated.

- Fixed specs and rbxspecs rake targets (Patch from Hongli Lai
<hongli@phusion.nl>)

- FFI.errno will now return the errno set by the last native function call

- Memory allocated for Buffer and MemoryPointer is guaranteed to be at
least 8 byte aligned.

- Integer types are all range checked.  i.e. if you try and pass a
value > 127 as a :char parameter, it will raise an error.

- Add compat.h header to deal with ancient (i.e. < 1.8.6) versions of ruby

- Add missing :float and :double Struct member support (Patch from
Andrea Fazzi <andrea.fazzi@alcacoop.it>)

- Reworked get_string and put_string to only handle NUL terminated ascii
strings, and create get_bytes/put_bytes for binary data.

-  Per-module/library type definitions/aliases.

- Custom managment of Pointer & Struct lifecycle (from Mike Dalessio)

- Library handle caching (from Luc Heinrich <luc@honk-honk.com>)

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