1 |
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2 Preface: |
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3 |
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4 Ruby provides an automatic constant called DATA, which is an IO object |
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5 that references all text in the current file under an __END__ token. |
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6 |
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7 I find it convenient to use the __END__ area to store all sorts of |
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8 stuff, rather than have to worry about distributing separate files. |
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9 |
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10 |
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11 The problem: |
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12 |
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13 The DATA constant is determined from whatever ruby believes $0 to be. |
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14 It doesn't work inside of other required libraries, so you'll see stuff |
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15 like this all the time: |
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16 |
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17 END = File.open( __FILE__ ).read.split( /^__END__/, 2 ).last |
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18 |
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19 It works, but it's more work than I want to do. |
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20 |
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21 |
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22 A workaround: |
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23 |
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24 Chunker solves this by parsing __END__ tokens for you, and making it |
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25 available in the form of a 'DATA_END' constant. It installs this |
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26 constant into the class that includes Chunker, so you can use it again |
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27 and again, assuming you use a different file for each class. |
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28 |
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29 It also automatically parses out other things that look like tokens, so |
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30 you can easily have multiple, distinct documents all embedded into the |
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31 __END__ block. |
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32 |
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33 |
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34 Usage: |
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35 |
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36 There is no direct interface to Chunker. Just include it from a |
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37 class to have that file's __END__ data blocks magically become DATA_* |
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38 IO constants within that class. |
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39 |
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40 |
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41 Example: |
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42 |
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43 This produces the string "Yep.\n". |
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44 |
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45 |
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46 require 'chunker' |
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47 class Foom |
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48 include Chunker |
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49 end |
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50 |
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51 puts Foom.new.class.const_get( :DATA_WICKED ).read |
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52 |
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53 __END__ |
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54 Stuff in the END block! |
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55 __WOW__ |
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56 Ultimate success! |
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57 __WICKED__ |
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58 Yep. |
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59 |
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