Support for the Ruby 2.4 series has ended. See here for reference.
Allows the opening of various resources including URIs.
If the first argument responds to the 'open' method, 'open' is called on it with the rest of the arguments.
If the first argument is a string that begins with xxx://, it is parsed by URI.parse. If the parsed object responds to the 'open' method, 'open' is called on it with the rest of the arguments.
Otherwise, the original Kernel#open
is called.
OpenURI::OpenRead#open
provides URI::HTTP#open
, URI::HTTPS#open and URI::FTP#open
, Kernel#open
.
We can accept URIs and strings that begin with http://, https:// and ftp://. In these cases, the opened file object is extended by OpenURI::Meta
.
# File open-uri.rb, line 29 def open(name, *rest, &block) # :doc: if name.respond_to?(:open) name.open(*rest, &block) elsif name.respond_to?(:to_str) && %r{\A[A-Za-z][A-Za-z0-9+\-\.]*://} =~ name && (uri = URI.parse(name)).respond_to?(:open) uri.open(*rest, &block) else open_uri_original_open(name, *rest, &block) end end
Allows the opening of various resources including URIs.
If the first argument responds to the 'open' method, 'open' is called on it with the rest of the arguments.
If the first argument is a string that begins with xxx://, it is parsed by URI.parse. If the parsed object responds to the 'open' method, 'open' is called on it with the rest of the arguments.
Otherwise, the original Kernel#open
is called.
OpenURI::OpenRead#open
provides URI::HTTP#open
, URI::HTTPS#open and URI::FTP#open
, Kernel#open
.
We can accept URIs and strings that begin with http://, https:// and ftp://. In these cases, the opened file object is extended by OpenURI::Meta
.
# File open-uri.rb, line 29 def open(name, *rest, &block) # :doc: if name.respond_to?(:open) name.open(*rest, &block) elsif name.respond_to?(:to_str) && %r{\A[A-Za-z][A-Za-z0-9+\-\.]*://} =~ name && (uri = URI.parse(name)).respond_to?(:open) uri.open(*rest, &block) else open_uri_original_open(name, *rest, &block) end end