I've searched through the newsgroup, found some related stuff (about
'string interpolation at will') but couldn't quite figure it out
completely
My question: I read a string from file, using 'readlines', containing
special characters, especially \n. These characters are not
substituted into their binary control characters, e.g. my strings act
as if created with 'test\abc' instead of "test\nabc". I would like
to convert these strings and have Ruby take account of the special
meaning of the escaped characters, so that I can print them out
nicely.
I see two ways:
- use gsub: str.gsub('\n',"\n"), but this solves only \n, so I need to
handle each possible escaped character manually
- use eval: eval('"' + str + '"'), but this is dangerous, for example
I had one string that ends with \, thereby breaking the eval code
since the slash escapes the closing quote.
Is there a better solution? I have the feeling that unpack would help,
but I simply can't understand the documentation of unpack. I found
some discussions on str.interpolate, but I don't care for
interpolation of Ruby code, I only want replacement of these special
characters.
(I had the same problem for unicode escapes \uxxxx, but I solved that
with some unpack code from the web)
Looks like you want something close to String#inspect.
puts "foo\tbar\n".inspect # -> "foo\tbar\n"
-- fxn
···
On Feb 20, 2007, at 7:10 PM, Eyal Oren wrote:
Hi,
I've searched through the newsgroup, found some related stuff (about
'string interpolation at will') but couldn't quite figure it out
completely
My question: I read a string from file, using 'readlines', containing
special characters, especially \n. These characters are not
substituted into their binary control characters, e.g. my strings act
as if created with 'test\abc' instead of "test\nabc". I would like
to convert these strings and have Ruby take account of the special
meaning of the escaped characters, so that I can print them out
nicely.
no, that doesn't work. what I would like is that puts would actually
print a tab and a newline, instead of \t and \n.
E.g. a = 'test\nbreak'. Then "puts a.inspect" doesn't actually print a
line break, it prints the characters '\n'. I would like to transform
"a" into a string that really includes a linebreak instead of the
characters '\n'.
Does anybody know how to do it, without eval or a manually crafted
gsub?
···
On Feb 20, 6:23 pm, Xavier Noria <f...@hashref.com> wrote:
Looks like you want something close to String#inspect.
puts "foo\tbar\n".inspect # -> "foo\tbar\n"
It looks like you're running into the fact that when you create a
string literal with a single quote (') it's treated differently than
when you construct the literal with double quotes...
Observe:
irb(main):001:0> a = 'test\nbreak'
=> "test\\nbreak"
irb(main):002:0> puts a
test\nbreak
=> nil
irb(main):003:0> puts 'whoops'
whoops
=> nil
irb(main):004:0> a = "test\n\break"
=> "test\n\break"
irb(main):005:0> puts a
test
reak
=> nil
irb(main):006:0> puts 'sweet!'
sweet!
=> nil
hth,
-Harold
···
On 2/21/07, Eyal Oren <eyal.oren@gmail.com> wrote:
E.g. a = 'test\nbreak'. Then "puts a.inspect" doesn't actually print a
line break, it prints the characters '\n'. I would like to transform
"a" into a string that really includes a linebreak instead of the
characters '\n'.
harp:~ > cat a.rb
class String
def double_quote
Thread.new do
$SAFE = 12
begin
eval('"%s"' % self)
rescue Exception => e
e
end
end.value
end
end
s = 'foo\tbar\nfoobar'
p s
p s.double_quote
puts s.double_quote
harp:~ > ruby a.rb
"foo\\tbar\\nfoobar"
"foo\tbar\nfoobar"
foo bar
foobar
seems like the obvious thing to so
$SAFE is.
regards.
-a
···
On Wed, 21 Feb 2007, Eyal Oren wrote:
On Feb 20, 6:23 pm, Xavier Noria <f...@hashref.com> wrote:
Looks like you want something close to String#inspect.
puts "foo\tbar\n".inspect # -> "foo\tbar\n"
no, that doesn't work. what I would like is that puts would actually
print a tab and a newline, instead of \t and \n.
E.g. a = 'test\nbreak'. Then "puts a.inspect" doesn't actually print a
line break, it prints the characters '\n'. I would like to transform
"a" into a string that really includes a linebreak instead of the
characters '\n'.
Does anybody know how to do it, without eval or a manually crafted
gsub?
--
we can deny everything, except that we have the possibility of being better.
simply reflect on that.
- the dalai lama
Problem is he reads the string 'foo\nbar' from an external source, that is, the string has a literal slash and a literal n within. He wants a nice way to convert that and any other escape sequence into an actual escape sequence.
-- fxn
···
On Feb 21, 2007, at 1:10 PM, Harold Hausman wrote:
On 2/21/07, Eyal Oren <eyal.oren@gmail.com> wrote:
E.g. a = 'test\nbreak'. Then "puts a.inspect" doesn't actually print a
line break, it prints the characters '\n'. I would like to transform
"a" into a string that really includes a linebreak instead of the
characters '\n'.
It looks like you're running into the fact that when you create a
string literal with a single quote (') it's treated differently than
when you construct the literal with double quotes...
Yes. I know. My question is: how to convert the one variant ('') into the other variant ("") at runtime?
As I said in my first post, I can do that using eval or using gsub, but both have problems. Does anybody know another way of converting ''-strings into ""-ones?
-eyal
···
On 02/21/07/02/07 21:10 +0900, Harold Hausman wrote:
It looks like you're running into the fact that when you create a
string literal with a single quote (') it's treated differently than
when you construct the literal with double quotes...
Thanks, I hadn't thought of using SAFE. My problem is that I encounter not-wellformed strings in the data, e.g. 'hello\', which break evaluation. But now I catch the exception and just return the string un-evaluated, which is fine, because those escape syntaxes are not allowed anyway.
So thanks, I've used your solution.
-eyal
···
On 02/22/07/02/07 01:17 +0900, ara.t.howard@noaa.gov wrote:
why are you avoiding eval?
harp:~ > cat a.rb
class String
def double_quote
Thread.new do
$SAFE = 12
begin
eval('"%s"' % self)
rescue Exception => e
e
end
end.value
end
end
I didn't even see that there were even earlier messages. I apologize.
What's worse, is that even after looking at this for 20+ mins, I still
don't see a way to cleanly do it. Once that backslash is escaped in
that string, you're pretty much hosed.
I think gsub is your best option here. Though, I'd love to to surprised. (:
Apologies,
-Harold
···
On 2/21/07, Xavier Noria <fxn@hashref.com> wrote:
On Feb 21, 2007, at 1:10 PM, Harold Hausman wrote:
> On 2/21/07, Eyal Oren <eyal.oren@gmail.com> wrote:
>> E.g. a = 'test\nbreak'. Then "puts a.inspect" doesn't actually
>> print a
>> line break, it prints the characters '\n'. I would like to transform
>> "a" into a string that really includes a linebreak instead of the
>> characters '\n'.
>>
>
> It looks like you're running into the fact that when you create a
> string literal with a single quote (') it's treated differently than
> when you construct the literal with double quotes...
Problem is he reads the string 'foo\nbar' from an external source,
that is, the string has a literal slash and a literal n within. He
wants a nice way to convert that and any other escape sequence into
an actual escape sequence.