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LinkBack | Outils de la discussion |
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#1 |
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Hébergeur: |
Hi,
What is the Ruby idiom for reading input word-by-word? In other words -- how to process input while skipping all of the whitespace. I would use this code in C++: //std::istream& stream; while (!stream.eof()) { std::string str; stream >> str; ... } Or something like this in C: char str[100]; // please no flame on fixed buffer size :-) while (!feof(file)) { fscanf("%99s", str); ... } I have tried to use Ruby's scanf("%s") but found it severely broken (as per my task)--it discards the rest of the input up to the newline. I currently use the following approach, which I find ugly: while not $stdin.eof? do words = $stdin.gets().scan(/[^\s]+/) words.each do |w| ... end end It takes me to write an inner loop and reads the entire string into memory and then splits it into array of words... Duh! My application is not in any case a time- or memory-critical, nor did I measured to find the performance bottleneck... however, I desire for the enlightenment. :-) Please show me the Ruby way! Cheers, Alex PS: Yes, I've searched the web, tutorials, FAQs, cookbooks, etc. before posting this. No luck. |
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#2 |
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Messages: n/a
Hébergeur: |
On Sep 16, 2007, at 3:10 PM, Alex Shulgin wrote: > Please show me the Ruby way! > http://ec1.images-amazon.com/images/I/41X2833B8TL.jpg I believe that should be enough to show you the ruby way. Maybe you could try this: a = gets.chomp #=> "My name is Ari" words = a.split(/ /) #=> ["My", "name", "is", "Ari"] Tadah! I REALLY hope that's what you're looking for. -------------------------------------------------------| ~ Ari crap my sig won't fit |
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#3 |
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Messages: n/a
Hébergeur: |
On 16.09.2007 21:08, Alex Shulgin wrote:
> Hi, > > What is the Ruby idiom for reading input word-by-word? In other words > -- how to process input while skipping all of the whitespace. > > I would use this code in C++: > > //std::istream& stream; > while (!stream.eof()) > { > std::string str; > stream >> str; > ... > } > > Or something like this in C: > > char str[100]; // please no flame on fixed buffer size :-) > while (!feof(file)) > { > fscanf("%99s", str); > ... > } > > I have tried to use Ruby's scanf("%s") but found it severely broken > (as per my task)--it discards the rest of the input up to the > newline. I currently use the following approach, which I find ugly: > > while not $stdin.eof? do > words = $stdin.gets().scan(/[^\s]+/) > words.each do |w| > ... > end > end > > It takes me to write an inner loop and reads the entire string into > memory and then splits it into array of words... Duh! > > My application is not in any case a time- or memory-critical, nor did > I measured to find the performance bottleneck... however, I desire for > the enlightenment. :-) > > Please show me the Ruby way! > > > Cheers, > Alex > PS: Yes, I've searched the web, tutorials, FAQs, cookbooks, etc. > before posting this. No luck. If you do not need to treat every word before it is read from the input you could do this: $stdin.each do |line| line.scan /\w+/ do |word| puts word end end If your definition of "word" is different (i.e. non whitespace characters) you need a different regexp (for example /\S+/). If you want to read to word boundaries only it becomes more difficult. Kind regards robert |
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#4 |
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Hébergeur: |
On Sep 17, 12:19 am, Robert Klemme <shortcut...@googlemail.com> wrote:
> > If you do not need to treat every word before it is read from the input > you could do this: > > $stdin.each do |line| > line.scan /\w+/ do |word| > puts word > end > end > > If your definition of "word" is different (i.e. non whitespace > characters) you need a different regexp (for example /\S+/). > > If you want to read to word boundaries only it becomes more difficult. This is more or less the same code as I use, maybe a bit more readable, tough. :-) So there is no way in Ruby to read words w/o reading the whole line of input and then splitting/scanning the line (which takes us two nested loops anyway)? Looks very odd to me... Alex |
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#5 |
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Messages: n/a
Hébergeur: |
2007/9/17, Alex Shulgin <alex.shulgin@gmail.com>:
> On Sep 17, 12:19 am, Robert Klemme <shortcut...@googlemail.com> wrote: > > > > If you do not need to treat every word before it is read from the input > > you could do this: > > > > $stdin.each do |line| > > line.scan /\w+/ do |word| > > puts word > > end > > end > > > > If your definition of "word" is different (i.e. non whitespace > > characters) you need a different regexp (for example /\S+/). > > > > If you want to read to word boundaries only it becomes more difficult. > > This is more or less the same code as I use, maybe a bit more > readable, tough. :-) > > So there is no way in Ruby to read words w/o reading the whole line of > input and then splitting/scanning the line (which takes us two nested > loops anyway)? Looks very odd to me... Well, you can use #getc and implement the word matching logic yourself. But that is more tedious and it's also questionable whether that will be as efficient. And since a line break is a word boundary anyway the nested loop approach yields the proper result (aka sequence of words) as the other approach. So why bother to create a word iterating solution just to get rid of one level of loop nesting? Kind regards robert |
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#6 |
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Messages: n/a
Hébergeur: |
On Sep 17, 4:30 am, Alex Shulgin <alex.shul...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On Sep 17, 12:19 am, Robert Klemme <shortcut...@googlemail.com> wrote: > > > > > If you do not need to treat every word before it is read from the input > > you could do this: > > > $stdin.each do |line| > > line.scan /\w+/ do |word| > > puts word > > end > > end > > > If your definition of "word" is different (i.e. non whitespace > > characters) you need a different regexp (for example /\S+/). > > > If you want to read to word boundaries only it becomes more difficult. > > This is more or less the same code as I use, maybe a bit more > readable, tough. :-) > > So there is no way in Ruby to read words w/o reading the whole line of > input and then splitting/scanning the line (which takes us two nested > loops anyway)? Looks very odd to me... > > Alex Awk is a very popular tool for text processing, but there is no way to make it treat a sequence of whitespace characters as a record-separator. So in awk, as in Ruby, text is almost always read a line at a time. Gawk added the ability to set the record-separator to a regular expression: gawk 'BEGIN{RS="[ \t\n]+"} 1' |
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#7 |
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Hébergeur: |
On Sep 17, 6:19 pm, William James <w_a_x_...@yahoo.com> wrote:
> > Awk is a very popular tool for text processing, but there is no > way to make it treat a sequence of whitespace characters as a > record-separator. So in awk, as in Ruby, text is almost always > read a line at a time. I thought Ruby is not just a text processing tool, but a general purpose programming language. Anyway, it would be nice to have a solution for this problem as compact and flexible as C++ example I've provided. What if scanf() didn't discard the rest of the line... but now is too late to fix it. :-/ Regards, Alex |
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#8 |
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Messages: n/a
Hébergeur: |
Hi,
Am Montag, 17. Sep 2007, 04:19:53 +0900 schrieb Ari Brown: > On Sep 16, 2007, at 3:10 PM, Alex Shulgin wrote: >> Please show me the Ruby way! > > Maybe you could try this: > > a = gets.chomp #=> "My name is Ari" > words = a.split(/ /) #=> ["My", "name", "is", "Ari"] This isn't actually elaborate as it doesn't recognize tabs or multiple whitespace. It is even longer than words = gets.split With no argument or nil, String#split uses $; what normally is nil, too. Then, split uses something like %r/[ \t\n\r\v\f]+/. You may easily read whole lines; they shouldn't become too long. Reading the first word before the user typed enter would need to tweak terminal settings. Not worth the effort in most cases. Bertram -- Bertram Scharpf Stuttgart, Deutschland/Germany http://www.bertram-scharpf.de |
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