def main(argc : Int32, argv : Pointer(Pointer(UInt8)))Source
Main function that acts as C's main function. Invokes Crystal.main
.
Can be redefined. See Crystal.main
for examples.
IO::ARGF.new(ARGV, STDIN)
An IO
for reading files from ARGV
.
Usage example:
program.cr
:
puts ARGF.gets_to_end
A file to read from: (file
)
123
$ crystal build program.cr $ ./program file 123 $ ./program file file 123123 $ # If ARGV is empty, ARGF reads from STDIN instead: $ echo "hello" | ./program hello $ ./program unknown Unhandled exception: Error opening file with mode 'r': 'unknown': No such file or directory (File::NotFoundError) ...
After a file from ARGV
has been read, it's removed from ARGV
.
You can manipulate ARGV
yourself to control what ARGF
operates on. If you remove a file from ARGV
, it is ignored by ARGF
; if you add files to ARGV
, ARGF
will read from it.
ARGV.replace ["file1"] ARGF.gets_to_end # => Content of file1 ARGV # => [] ARGV << "file2" ARGF.gets_to_end # => Content of file2
Array.new(ARGC_UNSAFE - 1) do |i|
String.new(ARGV_UNSAFE[1 + i])
end
An array of arguments passed to the program.
String.new(ARGV_UNSAFE.value)
The name, the program was called with.
IO::FileDescriptor.from_stdio(2)
The standard error file descriptor.
Typically used to output error messages and diagnostics.
At the start of the program STDERR is configured like this:
sync
is true
, meaning that output will be outputted as soon as it is written to STDERR. This is so users can see real time output data.sync
is false
but flush_on_newline
is true
. This is so that if you pipe the output to a file, and, for example, you tail -f
, you can see data on a line-per-line basis. This is convenient but slower than with flush_on_newline
set to false
. If you need a bit more performance and you don't care about near real-time output you can do STDERR.flush_on_newline = false
.IO::FileDescriptor.from_stdio(0)
The standard input file descriptor. Contains data piped to the program.
IO::FileDescriptor.from_stdio(1)
The standard output file descriptor.
Typically used to output data and information.
At the start of the program STDOUT is configured like this:
sync
is true
, meaning that output will be outputted as soon as it is written to STDOUT. This is so users can see real time output data.sync
is false
but flush_on_newline
is true
. This is so that if you pipe the output to a file, and, for example, you tail -f
, you can see data on a line-per-line basis. This is convenient but slower than with flush_on_newline
set to false
. If you need a bit more performance and you don't care about near real-time output you can do STDOUT.flush_on_newline = false
.Returns the standard output of executing command in a subshell.
Terminates execution immediately, printing message to STDERR
and then calling exit(status)
.
Registers the given Proc
for execution when the program exits.
Returns the current execution stack as an array containing strings usually in the form file:line:column or file:line:column in 'method'.
Terminates execution immediately, returning the given status code to the invoking environment.
Reads a line from STDIN
.
Returns the instance size of the given class as number of bytes.
Repeatedly executes the block.
Main function that acts as C's main function.
Returns the byte offset of an instance variable in a struct or class type.
Inspects object to STDOUT
followed by a newline.
Inspects objects to STDOUT
, followed by a newline.
Inspects each object in objects to STDOUT
, followed by a newline.
Returns a Pointer
to the contents of a variable.
Pretty prints objects to STDOUT
, followed by a newline.
Pretty prints each object in objects to STDOUT
, followed by a newline.
Pretty prints object to STDOUT
followed by a newline.
Prints objects to STDOUT
and then invokes STDOUT.flush
.
Prints a formatted string to STDOUT
.
Prints a formatted string to STDOUT
.
Prints objects to STDOUT
, each followed by a newline.
Raises an Exception with the message.
Raises the exception.
See Random#rand
.
See Random#rand(x)
.
Reads a line from STDIN
.
Returns the size of the given type as number of bytes.
Blocks the current fiber for the specified number of seconds.
Blocks the current fiber forever.
Blocks the current Fiber for the specified time span.
Spawns a new fiber.
Returns a formatted string.
Returns a formatted string.
Executes the given command in a subshell.
Timeout keyword for use in select
.
Returns the type of an expression.
DEPRECATED Use Colorize.with.fore(color)
DEPRECATED Use Colorize.with
Prints a series of expressions together with their inspected values.
Prints a series of expressions together with their pretty printed values.
Defines a Struct
with the given name and properties.
Spec::Methods
Spec::Expectations
Returns the standard output of executing command in a subshell. Standard input, and error are inherited. The special $?
variable is set to a Process::Status
associated with this execution.
Example:
`echo hi` # => "hi\n"
Terminates execution immediately, printing message to STDERR
and then calling exit(status)
.
Registers the given Proc
for execution when the program exits. If multiple handlers are registered, they are executed in reverse order of registration.
def do_at_exit(str1) at_exit { print str1 } end at_exit { puts "cruel world" } do_at_exit("goodbye ") exit
Produces:
goodbye cruel world
The exit status code that will be returned by this program is passed to the block as its first argument. In case of any unhandled exception, it is passed as the second argument to the block, if the program terminates normally or exit(status)
is called explicitly, then the second argument will be nil
.
NOTE If at_exit
is called inside an at_exit
handler, it will be called right after the current at_exit
handler ends, and then other handlers will be invoked.
Returns the current execution stack as an array containing strings usually in the form file:line:column or file:line:column in 'method'.
Terminates execution immediately, returning the given status code to the invoking environment.
Registered at_exit
procs are executed.
Returns the instance size of the given class as number of bytes.
type must be a constant or typeof()
expresion. It cannot be evaluated at runtime.
instance_sizeof(String) # => 16 instance_sizeof(Exception) # => 48
See sizeof
for determining the size of value types.
NOTE This is a pseudo-method provided directly by the Crystal compiler. It cannot be redefined nor overridden.
Repeatedly executes the block.
loop do line = gets break unless line # ... end
Main function that acts as C's main function. Invokes Crystal.main
.
Can be redefined. See Crystal.main
for examples.
Returns the byte offset of an instance variable in a struct or class type.
type must be a constant or typeof()
expression. It cannot be evaluated at runtime. variable must be the name of an instance variable of type, prefixed by @
.
offsetof(String, @bytesize) # => 4 offsetof(Exception, @message) # => 8 offsetof(Time, @location) # => 16
NOTE This is a pseudo-method provided directly by the Crystal compiler. It cannot be redefined nor overridden.
Inspects object to STDOUT
followed by a newline. Returns object.
See also: Object#inspect(io)
.
Inspects objects to STDOUT
, followed by a newline. Returns objects.
p foo: 23, bar: 42 # => {foo: 23, bar: 42}
See Object#inspect(io)
Inspects each object in objects to STDOUT
, followed by a newline. Returns objects.
See also: Object#inspect(io)
.
Returns a Pointer
to the contents of a variable.
variable must be a variable (local, instance, class or library).
a = 1 ptr = pointerof(a) ptr.value = 2 a # => 2
NOTE This is a pseudo-method provided directly by the Crystal compiler. It cannot be redefined nor overridden.
Pretty prints objects to STDOUT
, followed by a newline. Returns objects.
p foo: 23, bar: 42 # => {foo: 23, bar: 42}
See Object#pretty_print(pp)
Pretty prints each object in objects to STDOUT
, followed by a newline. Returns objects.
See also: Object#pretty_print(pp)
.
Pretty prints object to STDOUT
followed by a newline. Returns object.
See also: Object#pretty_print(pp)
.
Prints objects to STDOUT
and then invokes STDOUT.flush
.
See also: IO#print
.
Prints objects to STDOUT
, each followed by a newline.
If the string representation of an object ends with a newline, no additional newline is printed for that object.
See also: IO#puts
.
Raises the exception.
This will set the exception's callstack if it hasn't been already. Re-raising a previously catched exception won't replace the callstack.
See Random#rand
.
See Random#rand(x)
.
Returns the size of the given type as number of bytes.
type must be a constant or typeof()
expression. It cannot be evaluated at runtime.
sizeof(Int32) # => 4 sizeof(Int64) # => 8 sizeof(typeof(true)) # => 1
For Reference
types, the size is the same as the size of a pointer:
# On a 64 bits machine sizeof(Pointer(Int32)) # => 8 sizeof(String) # => 8
This is because a Reference
's memory is allocated on the heap and a pointer to it is passed around. The size of a class on the heap can be determined using #instance_sizeof
.
NOTE This is a pseudo-method provided directly by the Crystal compiler. It cannot be redefined nor overridden.
Blocks the current fiber for the specified number of seconds.
While this fiber is waiting this time, other ready-to-execute fibers might start their execution.
Blocks the current fiber forever.
Meanwhile, other ready-to-execute fibers might start their execution.
Blocks the current Fiber for the specified time span.
While this fiber is waiting this time, other ready-to-execute fibers might start their execution.
Spawns a new fiber.
The newly created fiber doesn't run as soon as spawned.
Example:
# Write "1" every 1 second and "2" every 2 seconds for 6 seconds. ch = Channel(Nil).new spawn do 6.times do sleep 1 puts 1 end ch.send(nil) end spawn do 3.times do sleep 2 puts 2 end ch.send(nil) end 2.times { ch.receive }
Returns a formatted string. The string is produced according to the format_string with format specifiers being replaced by values from args formatted according to the specifier.
Within the format string, any characters other than format specifiers (specifiers beginning with %
) are copied to the result.
The syntax for a format specifier is:
%[flags][width][.precision]type
A format specifier consists of a percent sign, followed by optional flags, width, and precision indicators, then terminated with a field type character.
The field type controls how the corresponding sprintf
argument is to be interpreted, while the flags modify that interpretation.
The field type characters are:
Field | Integer Format ------+------------------------------------------------------------------ b | Formats argument as a binary number. d | Formats argument as a decimal number. i | Same as d. o | Formats argument as an octal number. x | Formats argument as a hexadecimal number using lowercase letters. X | Same as x, but uses uppercase letters. Field | Float Format ------+--------------------------------------------------------------- e | Formats floating point argument into exponential notation | with one digit before the decimal point as [-]d.dddddde[+-]dd. | The precision specifies the number of digits after the decimal | point (defaulting to six). E | Equivalent to e, but uses an uppercase E to indicate | the exponent. f | Formats floating point argument as [-]ddd.dddddd, | where the precision specifies the number of digits after | the decimal point. g | Formats a floating point number using exponential form | if the exponent is less than -4 or greater than or | equal to the precision, or in dd.dddd form otherwise. | The precision specifies the number of significant digits. G | Equivalent to g, but use an uppercase E in exponent form. a | Formats floating point argument as [-]0xh.hhhhp[+-]dd, | which consists of an optional sign, "0x", fraction part | as hexadecimal, "p", and exponential part as decimal. A | Equivalent to a, but uses uppercase X and P. Field | Other Format ------+------------------------------------------------------------ c | Argument is a single character itself. s | Argument is a string to be substituted. If the format | sequence contains a precision, at most that many characters | will be copied. % | A percent sign itself will be displayed. No argument taken.
Flags modify the behavior of the format specifiers:
Flag | Applies to | Meaning ---------+---------------+-------------------------------------------- space | bdiouxX | Add a leading space character to | aAeEfgG | non-negative numbers. | (numeric fmt) | For o, x, X, b, use | | a minus sign with absolute value for | | negative values. ---------+---------------+-------------------------------------------- + | bdiouxX | Add a leading plus sign to non-negative | aAeEfgG | numbers. | (numeric fmt) | For o, x, X, b, use | | a minus sign with absolute value for | | negative values. ---------+---------------+-------------------------------------------- - | all | Left-justify the result of this conversion. ---------+---------------+-------------------------------------------- 0 (zero) | bdiouxX | Pad with zeros, not spaces. | aAeEfgG | For o, x, X, b, radix-1 | (numeric fmt) | is used for negative numbers formatted as | | complements.
Examples of flags:
Decimal number conversion:
sprintf "%d", 123 # => "123" sprintf "%+d", 123 # => "+123" sprintf "% d", 123 # => " 123"
Octal number conversion:
sprintf "%o", 123 # => "173" sprintf "%+o", 123 # => "+173" sprintf "%o", -123 # => "-173" sprintf "%+o", -123 # => "-173"
Hexadecimal number conversion:
sprintf "%x", 123 # => "7b" sprintf "%+x", 123 # => "+7b" sprintf "%x", -123 # => "-7b" sprintf "%+x", -123 # => "-7b" sprintf "%#x", 0 # => "0" sprintf "% x", 123 # => " 7b" sprintf "% x", -123 # => "-7b" sprintf "%X", 123 # => "7B" sprintf "%#X", -123 # => "-7B"
Binary number conversion:
sprintf "%b", 123 # => "1111011" sprintf "%+b", 123 # => "+1111011" sprintf "%+b", -123 # => "-1111011" sprintf "%b", -123 # => "-1111011" sprintf "%#b", 0 # => "0" sprintf "% b", 123 # => " 1111011" sprintf "%+ b", 123 # => "+ 1111011" sprintf "% b", -123 # => "-1111011" sprintf "%+ b", -123 # => "-1111011"
Floating point conversion:
sprintf "%a", 123 # => "0x1.ecp+6" sprintf "%A", 123 # => "0X1.ECP+6"
Exponential form conversion:
sprintf "%g", 123.4 # => "123.4" sprintf "%g", 123.4567 # => "123.457" sprintf "%20.8g", 1234.56789 # => " 1234.5679" sprintf "%20.8g", 123456789 # => " 1.2345679e+08" sprintf "%20.8G", 123456789 # => " 1.2345679E+08" sprintf "%20.8g", -123456789 # => " -1.2345679e+08" sprintf "%20.8G", -123456789 # => " -1.2345679E+08"
The field width is an optional integer, followed optionally by a period and a precision. The width specifies the minimum number of characters that will be written to the result for this field.
Examples of width:
sprintf "%20d", 123 # => " 123" sprintf "%+20d", 123 # => " +123" sprintf "%020d", 123 # => "00000000000000000123" sprintf "%+020d", 123 # => "+0000000000000000123" sprintf "% 020d", 123 # => " 0000000000000000123" sprintf "%-20d", 123 # => "123 " sprintf "%-+20d", 123 # => "+123 " sprintf "%- 20d", 123 # => " 123 " sprintf "%020x", -123 # => "00000000000000000-7b" sprintf "%020X", -123 # => "00000000000000000-7B"
For numeric fields, the precision controls the number of decimal places displayed.
For string fields, the precision determines the maximum number of characters to be copied from the string.
Examples of precisions:
Precision for d
, o
, x
and b
is minimum number of digits:
sprintf "%20.8d", 123 # => " 123" sprintf "%020.8d", 123 # => "00000000000000000123" sprintf "%20.8o", 123 # => " 173" sprintf "%020.8o", 123 # => "00000000000000000173" sprintf "%20.8x", 123 # => " 7b" sprintf "%020.8x", 123 # => "0000000000000000007b" sprintf "%20.8b", 123 # => " 1111011" sprintf "%20.8d", -123 # => " -123" sprintf "%020.8d", -123 # => "0000000000000000-123" sprintf "%20.8o", -123 # => " -173" sprintf "%20.8x", -123 # => " -7b" sprintf "%20.8b", -11 # => " -1011"
Precision for e
is number of digits after the decimal point:
sprintf "%20.8e", 1234.56789 # => " 1.23456789e+03"
Precision for f
is number of digits after the decimal point:
sprintf "%20.8f", 1234.56789 # => " 1234.56789000"
Precision for g
is number of significant digits:
sprintf "%20.8g", 1234.56789 # => " 1234.5679" sprintf "%20.8g", 123456789 # => " 1.2345679e+08" sprintf "%-20.8g", 123456789 # => "1.2345679e+08 "
Precision for s
is maximum number of characters:
sprintf "%20.8s", "string test" # => " string t"
Additional examples:
sprintf "%d %04x", 123, 123 # => "123 007b" sprintf "%08b '%4s'", 123, 123 # => "01111011 ' 123'" sprintf "%+g:% g:%-g", 1.23, 1.23, 1.23 # => "+1.23: 1.23:1.23"
Returns a formatted string. The string is produced according to the format_string with format specifiers being replaced by values from args formatted according to the specifier.
Within the format string, any characters other than format specifiers (specifiers beginning with %
) are copied to the result.
The syntax for a format specifier is:
%[flags][width][.precision]type
A format specifier consists of a percent sign, followed by optional flags, width, and precision indicators, then terminated with a field type character.
The field type controls how the corresponding sprintf
argument is to be interpreted, while the flags modify that interpretation.
The field type characters are:
Field | Integer Format ------+------------------------------------------------------------------ b | Formats argument as a binary number. d | Formats argument as a decimal number. i | Same as d. o | Formats argument as an octal number. x | Formats argument as a hexadecimal number using lowercase letters. X | Same as x, but uses uppercase letters. Field | Float Format ------+--------------------------------------------------------------- e | Formats floating point argument into exponential notation | with one digit before the decimal point as [-]d.dddddde[+-]dd. | The precision specifies the number of digits after the decimal | point (defaulting to six). E | Equivalent to e, but uses an uppercase E to indicate | the exponent. f | Formats floating point argument as [-]ddd.dddddd, | where the precision specifies the number of digits after | the decimal point. g | Formats a floating point number using exponential form | if the exponent is less than -4 or greater than or | equal to the precision, or in dd.dddd form otherwise. | The precision specifies the number of significant digits. G | Equivalent to g, but use an uppercase E in exponent form. a | Formats floating point argument as [-]0xh.hhhhp[+-]dd, | which consists of an optional sign, "0x", fraction part | as hexadecimal, "p", and exponential part as decimal. A | Equivalent to a, but uses uppercase X and P. Field | Other Format ------+------------------------------------------------------------ c | Argument is a single character itself. s | Argument is a string to be substituted. If the format | sequence contains a precision, at most that many characters | will be copied. % | A percent sign itself will be displayed. No argument taken.
Flags modify the behavior of the format specifiers:
Flag | Applies to | Meaning ---------+---------------+-------------------------------------------- space | bdiouxX | Add a leading space character to | aAeEfgG | non-negative numbers. | (numeric fmt) | For o, x, X, b, use | | a minus sign with absolute value for | | negative values. ---------+---------------+-------------------------------------------- + | bdiouxX | Add a leading plus sign to non-negative | aAeEfgG | numbers. | (numeric fmt) | For o, x, X, b, use | | a minus sign with absolute value for | | negative values. ---------+---------------+-------------------------------------------- - | all | Left-justify the result of this conversion. ---------+---------------+-------------------------------------------- 0 (zero) | bdiouxX | Pad with zeros, not spaces. | aAeEfgG | For o, x, X, b, radix-1 | (numeric fmt) | is used for negative numbers formatted as | | complements.
Examples of flags:
Decimal number conversion:
sprintf "%d", 123 # => "123" sprintf "%+d", 123 # => "+123" sprintf "% d", 123 # => " 123"
Octal number conversion:
sprintf "%o", 123 # => "173" sprintf "%+o", 123 # => "+173" sprintf "%o", -123 # => "-173" sprintf "%+o", -123 # => "-173"
Hexadecimal number conversion:
sprintf "%x", 123 # => "7b" sprintf "%+x", 123 # => "+7b" sprintf "%x", -123 # => "-7b" sprintf "%+x", -123 # => "-7b" sprintf "%#x", 0 # => "0" sprintf "% x", 123 # => " 7b" sprintf "% x", -123 # => "-7b" sprintf "%X", 123 # => "7B" sprintf "%#X", -123 # => "-7B"
Binary number conversion:
sprintf "%b", 123 # => "1111011" sprintf "%+b", 123 # => "+1111011" sprintf "%+b", -123 # => "-1111011" sprintf "%b", -123 # => "-1111011" sprintf "%#b", 0 # => "0" sprintf "% b", 123 # => " 1111011" sprintf "%+ b", 123 # => "+ 1111011" sprintf "% b", -123 # => "-1111011" sprintf "%+ b", -123 # => "-1111011"
Floating point conversion:
sprintf "%a", 123 # => "0x1.ecp+6" sprintf "%A", 123 # => "0X1.ECP+6"
Exponential form conversion:
sprintf "%g", 123.4 # => "123.4" sprintf "%g", 123.4567 # => "123.457" sprintf "%20.8g", 1234.56789 # => " 1234.5679" sprintf "%20.8g", 123456789 # => " 1.2345679e+08" sprintf "%20.8G", 123456789 # => " 1.2345679E+08" sprintf "%20.8g", -123456789 # => " -1.2345679e+08" sprintf "%20.8G", -123456789 # => " -1.2345679E+08"
The field width is an optional integer, followed optionally by a period and a precision. The width specifies the minimum number of characters that will be written to the result for this field.
Examples of width:
sprintf "%20d", 123 # => " 123" sprintf "%+20d", 123 # => " +123" sprintf "%020d", 123 # => "00000000000000000123" sprintf "%+020d", 123 # => "+0000000000000000123" sprintf "% 020d", 123 # => " 0000000000000000123" sprintf "%-20d", 123 # => "123 " sprintf "%-+20d", 123 # => "+123 " sprintf "%- 20d", 123 # => " 123 " sprintf "%020x", -123 # => "00000000000000000-7b" sprintf "%020X", -123 # => "00000000000000000-7B"
For numeric fields, the precision controls the number of decimal places displayed.
For string fields, the precision determines the maximum number of characters to be copied from the string.
Examples of precisions:
Precision for d
, o
, x
and b
is minimum number of digits:
sprintf "%20.8d", 123 # => " 123" sprintf "%020.8d", 123 # => "00000000000000000123" sprintf "%20.8o", 123 # => " 173" sprintf "%020.8o", 123 # => "00000000000000000173" sprintf "%20.8x", 123 # => " 7b" sprintf "%020.8x", 123 # => "0000000000000000007b" sprintf "%20.8b", 123 # => " 1111011" sprintf "%20.8d", -123 # => " -123" sprintf "%020.8d", -123 # => "0000000000000000-123" sprintf "%20.8o", -123 # => " -173" sprintf "%20.8x", -123 # => " -7b" sprintf "%20.8b", -11 # => " -1011"
Precision for e
is number of digits after the decimal point:
sprintf "%20.8e", 1234.56789 # => " 1.23456789e+03"
Precision for f
is number of digits after the decimal point:
sprintf "%20.8f", 1234.56789 # => " 1234.56789000"
Precision for g
is number of significant digits:
sprintf "%20.8g", 1234.56789 # => " 1234.5679" sprintf "%20.8g", 123456789 # => " 1.2345679e+08" sprintf "%-20.8g", 123456789 # => "1.2345679e+08 "
Precision for s
is maximum number of characters:
sprintf "%20.8s", "string test" # => " string t"
Additional examples:
sprintf "%d %04x", 123, 123 # => "123 007b" sprintf "%08b '%4s'", 123, 123 # => "01111011 ' 123'" sprintf "%+g:% g:%-g", 1.23, 1.23, 1.23 # => "+1.23: 1.23:1.23"
Executes the given command in a subshell. Standard input, output and error are inherited. Returns true
if the command gives zero exit code, false
otherwise. The special $?
variable is set to a Process::Status
associated with this execution.
If command contains no spaces and args is given, it will become its argument list.
If command contains spaces and args is given, command must include "${@}"
(including the quotes) to receive the argument list.
No shell interpretation is done in args.
Example:
system("echo *")
Produces:
LICENSE shard.yml Readme.md spec src
Timeout keyword for use in select
.
select when x = ch.receive puts "got #{x}" when timeout(1.seconds) puts "timeout" end
NOTE It won't trigger if the select
has an else
case (i.e.: a non-blocking select).
NOTE Using negative amounts will cause the timeout to not trigger.
Returns the type of an expression.
typeof(1) # => Int32
It accepts multiple arguments, and the result is the union of the expression types:
typeof(1, "a", 'a') # => (Int32 | String | Char)
The expressions passed as arguments to typeof
do not evaluate. The compiler only analyzes their return type.
NOTE This is a pseudo-method provided directly by the Crystal compiler. It cannot be redefined nor overridden.
DEPRECATED Use Colorize.with
Prints a series of expressions together with their inspected values. Useful for print style debugging.
a = 1 p! a # => "a # => 1" p! [1, 2, 3].map(&.to_s) # => "[1, 2, 3].map(&.to_s) # => ["1", "2", "3"]"
See also: p
, Object#inspect
.
Prints a series of expressions together with their pretty printed values. Useful for print style debugging.
a = 1 pp! a # => "a # => 1" pp! [1, 2, 3].map(&.to_s) # => "[1, 2, 3].map(&.to_s) # => ["1", "2", "3"]"
See also: pp
, Object#pretty_inspect
.
Defines a Struct
with the given name and properties.
The generated struct has a constructor with the given properties in the same order as declared. The struct only provides getters, not setters, making it immutable by default.
The properties can be type declarations or assignments.
You can pass a block to this macro, that will be inserted inside the struct definition.
record Point, x : Int32, y : Int32 Point.new 1, 2 # => #<Point(@x=1, @y=2)>
An example with the block version:
record Person, first_name : String, last_name : String do def full_name "#{first_name} #{last_name}" end end person = Person.new "John", "Doe" person.full_name # => "John Doe"
An example with type declarations and default values:
record Point, x : Int32 = 0, y : Int32 = 0 Point.new # => #<Point(@x=0, @y=0)> Point.new y: 2 # => #<Point(@x=0, @y=2)>
An example with assignments (in this case the compiler must be able to infer the types from the default values):
record Point, x = 0, y = 0 Point.new # => #<Point(@x=0, @y=0)> Point.new y: 2 # => #<Point(@x=0, @y=2)>
This macro also provides a copy_with
method which returns a copy of the record with the provided properties altered.
record Point, x = 0, y = 0 p = Point.new y: 2 # => #<Point(@x=0, @y=2)> p.copy_with x: 3 # => #<Point(@x=3, @y=2)> p # => #<Point(@x=0, @y=2)>
Spawns a fiber by first creating a Proc
, passing the call's expressions to it, and letting the Proc
finally invoke the call.
Compare this:
i = 0 while i < 5 spawn { print(i) } i += 1 end Fiber.yield # Output: 55555
To this:
i = 0 while i < 5 spawn print(i) i += 1 end Fiber.yield # Output: 01234
This is because in the first case all spawned fibers refer to the same local variable, while in the second example copies of i are passed to a Proc
that eventually invokes the call.
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Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0.
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