Ruby Programming/Here documents

← Strings | ASCII →

建立多行的字串時,Ruby支援here documents,一個來自於Bourne shell的功能,而且在PerlPHP也都支援此功能。

Here documents

编辑

建構一個here document,則得用<<運算子跟隨著一個識別字用以辨別here document的結束。結尾標籤稱之為終止者。在終止者之前的每行文字都會被視為是here document的內容,包含任何換行與其它的空白。

   puts <<GROCERY_LIST
   Grocery list
   ------------
   1. Salad mix.
   2. Strawberries.*
   3. Cereal.
   4. Milk.*
 
   * Organic
   GROCERY_LIST
   Grocery list
   ------------
   1. Salad mix.
   2. Strawberries.*
   3. Cereal.
   4. Milk.*
 
   * Organic
   GROCERY_LIST

結果:

$ grocery-list.rb
Grocery list
------------
1. Salad mix.
2. Strawberries.*
3. Cereal.
4. Milk.*

* Organic

If we pass the puts function multiple arguments, the string literal created from the here document is inserted into the argument list wherever the << operator appears. In the code below, the here-document (containing the four grocery items and a blank line) is passed in as the third argument. We get the same output as above.

puts 'Grocery list', '------------', <<GROCERY_LIST, '* Organic'
1. Salad mix.
2. Strawberries.*
3. Cereal.
4. Milk.*

GROCERY_LIST

You can also have multiple here documents in an argument list. We added a blank line at the end of each here document to make the output more readable.

puts 'Produce', '-------', <<PRODUCE, 'Dairy', '-----', <<DAIRY, '* Organic'
1. Strawberries*
2. Blueberries

PRODUCE
1. Yogurt
2. Milk*
3. Cottage Cheese

DAIRY

The result:

$ grocery-list.rb
Produce
-------
1. Strawberries*
2. Blueberries

Dairy
-----
1. Yogurt
2. Milk*
3. Cottage Cheese

* Organic

We have been using the puts function in our examples, but you can pass here documents to any function that accepts Strings.

Indenting

编辑

If you indent the lines inside the here document, the leading whitespace is preserved. However, there must not be any leading whitepace before the terminator.

puts 'Grocery list', '------------', <<GROCERY_LIST
    1. Salad mix.
    2. Strawberries.
    3. Cereal.
    4. Milk.
GROCERY_LIST

The result:

$ grocery-list.rb
Grocery list
------------
    1. Salad mix.
    2. Strawberries.
    3. Cereal.
    4. Milk.

If, for readability, you want to also indent the terminator, use the <<- operator.

puts 'Grocery list', '------------', <<-GROCERY_LIST
    1. Salad mix.
    2. Strawberries.
    3. Cereal.
    4. Milk.
    GROCERY_LIST

Note, however, that the whitespace before each line of text within the here document is still preserved.

$ grocery-list.rb
Grocery list
------------
    1. Salad mix.
    2. Strawberries.
    3. Cereal.
    4. Milk.

Quoting rules

编辑

You may wonder whether here documents follow single-quoting or double-quoting rules. If there are no quotes around the identifier, like in our examples so far, then the body of the here document follows double-quoting rules.

name = 'Charlie Brown'

puts <<QUIZ
Student: #{name}

1.\tQuestion: What is 4+5?
\tAnswer: The sum of 4 and 5 is #{4+5}
QUIZ

The result:

$ quiz.rb
Student: Charlie Brown

1.	Question: What is 4+5?
	Answer: The sum of 4 and 5 is 9

Double-quoting rules are also followed if you put double quotes around the identifier. However, do not put double quotes around the terminator.

puts <<"QUIZ"
Student: #{name}

1.\tQuestion: What is 4+5?
\tAnswer: The sum of 4 and 5 is #{4+5}
QUIZ

To create a here document that follows single-quoting rules, place single quotes around the identifier.

puts <<'BUS_SCHEDULES'
c:\napolean's documents\tomorrow's bus schedule.txt
c:\new documents\sam spade's bus schedule.txt
c:\bus schedules\the #9 bus schedule.txt
BUS_SCHEDULES

The result:

$ bus-schedules.rb
c:\napolean's documents\tomorrow's bus schedule.txt
c:\new documents\sam spade's bus schedule.txt
c:\bus schedules\the #9 bus schedule.txt