Class: Continuation
Overview
Continuation objects are generated by Kernel.callcc, after having required continuation. They hold a return address and execution context, allowing a nonlocal return to the end of the callcc block from anywhere within a program. Continuations are somewhat analogous to a structured version of C's setjmp/longjmp (although they contain more state, so you might consider them closer to threads).
For instance:
require "continuation"
arr = [ "Freddie", "Herbie", "Ron", "Max", "Ringo" ]
callcc{|cc| $cc = cc}
puts( = arr.shift)
$cc.call unless =~ /Max/
produces:
Freddie
Herbie
Ron
Max
Also you can call callcc in other methods:
require "continuation"
def g
arr = [ "Freddie", "Herbie", "Ron", "Max", "Ringo" ]
cc = callcc { |cc| cc }
puts arr.shift
return cc, arr.size
end
def f
c, size = g
c.call(c) if size > 1
end
f
This (somewhat contrived) example allows the inner loop to abandon processing early:
require "continuation"
callcc {|cont|
for i in 0..4
print "\n#{i}: "
for j in i*5...(i+1)*5
cont.call() if j == 17
printf "%3d", j
end
end
}
puts
produces:
0: 0 1 2 3 4
1: 5 6 7 8 9
2: 10 11 12 13 14
3: 15 16
Instance Method Summary
-
#[](args, ...)
(also: #call)
Invokes the continuation.
-
#call(args, ...)
Alias for #[].
Instance Method Details
#call(args, ...)
#[](args, ...)
Also known as: #call
Invokes the continuation. The program continues from the end of the callcc block. If no arguments are given, the original callcc returns nil. If one argument is given, callcc returns it. Otherwise, an array containing args is returned.
callcc {|cont| cont.call } #=> nil
callcc {|cont| cont.call 1 } #=> 1
callcc {|cont| cont.call 1, 2, 3 } #=> [1, 2, 3]
#call(args, ...)
#[](args, ...)
Alias for #[].