Module: RSS::Utils
Overview
Utils
is a module that holds various utility functions that are used across many parts of the rest of the ::RSS library. Like most modules named some variant of 'util', its methods are probably not particularly useful to those who aren't developing the library itself.
Class Method Summary
-
.element_initialize_arguments?(args) ⇒ Boolean
mod_func
This method is used inside of several different objects to determine if special behavior is needed in the constructor.
-
.get_file_and_line_from_caller(i = 0)
mod_func
Returns an array of two elements: the filename where the calling method is located, and the line number where it is defined.
-
.h(s)
mod_func
Alias for #html_escape.
-
.html_escape(s)
(also: .h)
mod_func
Takes a string
s
with some HTML in it, and escapes '&', '“', '<' and '>', by replacing them with the appropriate entities. -
.new_with_value_if_need(klass, value)
mod_func
If
value
is an instance of classklass
, return it, else create a new instance ofklass
with valuevalue
. -
.to_class_name(name)
mod_func
Given a
name
in a name_with_underscores or a name-with-dashes format, returns the CamelCase version ofname
.
Class Method Details
.element_initialize_arguments?(args) ⇒ Boolean
(mod_func)
This method is used inside of several different objects to determine if special behavior is needed in the constructor.
Special behavior is needed if the array passed in as args
has true
or false
as its value, and if the second element of args
is a hash.
# File 'lib/rss/utils.rb', line 123
def element_initialize_arguments?(args) [true, false].include?(args[0]) and args[1].is_a?(Hash) end
.get_file_and_line_from_caller(i = 0) (mod_func)
Returns an array of two elements: the filename where the calling method is located, and the line number where it is defined.
Takes an optional argument i
, which specifies how many callers up the stack to look.
Examples:
require 'rss/utils'
def foo
p RSS::Utils.get_file_and_line_from_caller
p RSS::Utils.get_file_and_line_from_caller(1)
end
def
foo
end
def baz
end
baz
# => ["test.rb", 5]
# => ["test.rb", 9]
If i
is not given, or is the default value of 0, it attempts to figure out the correct value. This is useful when in combination with instance_eval. For example:
require 'rss/utils'
def foo
p RSS::Utils.get_file_and_line_from_caller(1)
end
def
foo
end
instance_eval <<-RUBY, *RSS::Utils.get_file_and_line_from_caller
def baz
bar
end
RUBY
baz
# => ["test.rb", 8]
# File 'lib/rss/utils.rb', line 82
def get_file_and_line_from_caller(i=0) file, line, = caller[i].split(':') line = line.to_i line += 1 if i.zero? [file, line] end
.h(s) (mod_func)
Alias for #html_escape.
# File 'lib/rss/utils.rb', line 105
alias h html_escape
.html_escape(s) (mod_func) Also known as: .h
Takes a string s
with some HTML in it, and escapes '&', '“', '<' and '>', by replacing them with the appropriate entities.
This method is also aliased to h, for convenience.
Examples:
require 'rss/utils'
RSS::Utils.html_escape("Dungeons & Dragons")
# => "Dungeons & Dragons"
RSS::Utils.h(">_>")
# => ">_>"
# File 'lib/rss/utils.rb', line 102
def html_escape(s) s.to_s.gsub(/&/, "&").gsub(/\"/, """).gsub(/>/, ">").gsub(/</, "<") end
.new_with_value_if_need(klass, value) (mod_func)
If value
is an instance of class klass
, return it, else create a new instance of klass
with value value
.
# File 'lib/rss/utils.rb', line 109
def new_with_value_if_need(klass, value) if value.is_a?(klass) value else klass.new(value) end end
.to_class_name(name) (mod_func)
Given a name
in a name_with_underscores or a name-with-dashes format, returns the CamelCase version of name
.
If the name
is already CamelCased, nothing happens.
Examples:
require 'rss/utils'
RSS::Utils.to_class_name("sample_name")
# => "SampleName"
RSS::Utils.to_class_name("with-dashes")
# => "WithDashes"
RSS::Utils.to_class_name("CamelCase")
# => "CamelCase"
# File 'lib/rss/utils.rb', line 26
def to_class_name(name) name.split(/[_\-]/).collect do |part| "#{part[0, 1].upcase}#{part[1..-1]}" end.join("") end