Methods
Instance Public methods
===(value)
Extends the default Range#=== to support range comparisons.
(1..5) === (1..5) # => true
(1..5) === (2..3) # => true
(1..5) === (1...6) # => true
(1..5) === (2..6) # => false
The native Range#=== behavior is untouched.
('a'..'f') === ('c') # => true
(5..9) === (11) # => false
The given range must be fully bounded, with both start and end.
📝 Source code
# File activesupport/lib/active_support/core_ext/range/compare_range.rb, line 16
def ===(value)
if value.is_a?(::Range)
is_backwards_op = value.exclude_end? ? :>= : :>
return false if value.begin && value.end && value.begin.public_send(is_backwards_op, value.end)
# 1...10 includes 1..9 but it does not include 1..10.
# 1..10 includes 1...11 but it does not include 1...12.
operator = exclude_end? && !value.exclude_end? ? :< : :<=
value_max = !exclude_end? && value.exclude_end? ? value.max : value.last
super(value.first) && (self.end.nil? || value_max.public_send(operator, last))
else
super
end
end
🔎 See on GitHub
include?(value)
Extends the default Range#include? to support range comparisons.
(1..5).include?(1..5) # => true
(1..5).include?(2..3) # => true
(1..5).include?(1...6) # => true
(1..5).include?(2..6) # => false
The native Range#include? behavior is untouched.
('a'..'f').include?('c') # => true
(5..9).include?(11) # => false
The given range must be fully bounded, with both start and end.
📝 Source code
# File activesupport/lib/active_support/core_ext/range/compare_range.rb, line 41
def include?(value)
if value.is_a?(::Range)
is_backwards_op = value.exclude_end? ? :>= : :>
return false if value.begin && value.end && value.begin.public_send(is_backwards_op, value.end)
# 1...10 includes 1..9 but it does not include 1..10.
# 1..10 includes 1...11 but it does not include 1...12.
operator = exclude_end? && !value.exclude_end? ? :< : :<=
value_max = !exclude_end? && value.exclude_end? ? value.max : value.last
super(value.first) && (self.end.nil? || value_max.public_send(operator, last))
else
super
end
end
🔎 See on GitHub