# -*- rdoc -*-
= NEWS for Ruby 2.7.0
This document is a list of user visible feature changes made between
releases except for bug fixes.
Note that each entry is kept so brief that no reason behind or reference
information is supplied with. For a full list of changes with all
sufficient information, see the ChangeLog file or Redmine
(e.g. https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/$FEATURE_OR_BUG_NUMBER).
== Changes since the 2.6.0 release
=== Language changes
==== Pattern matching
* Pattern matching is introduced as an experimental feature. [Feature #14912]
case [0, [1, 2, 3]]
in [a, [b, *c]]
p a #=> 0
p b #=> 1
p c #=> [2, 3]
end
case {a: 0, b: 1}
in {a: 0, x: 1}
:unreachable
in {a: 0, b: var}
p var #=> 1
end
case -1
in 0 then :unreachable
in 1 then :unreachable
end #=> NoMatchingPatternError
json = < "Bob"
p age #=> 2
JSON.parse(json, symbolize_names: true) in {name: "Alice", children: [{name: "Charlie", age: age}]}
#=> NoMatchingPatternError
* See the following slides for more details:
* https://speakerdeck.com/k_tsj/pattern-matching-new-feature-in-ruby-2-dot-7
* Note that the slides are slightly obsolete.
* The warning against pattern matching can be suppressed with
{-W:no-experimental option}[#label-Warning+option].
==== The spec of keyword arguments is changed towards 3.0
* Automatic conversion of keyword arguments and positional arguments is
deprecated, and conversion will be removed in Ruby 3. [Feature #14183]
* When a method call passes a Hash at the last argument, and when it
passes no keywords, and when the called method accepts keywords,
a warning is emitted. To continue treating the hash as keywords,
add a double splat operator to avoid the warning and ensure
correct behavior in Ruby 3.
def foo(key: 42); end; foo({key: 42}) # warned
def foo(**kw); end; foo({key: 42}) # warned
def foo(key: 42); end; foo(**{key: 42}) # OK
def foo(**kw); end; foo(**{key: 42}) # OK
* When a method call passes keywords to a method that accepts keywords,
but it does not pass enough required positional arguments, the
keywords are treated as a final required positional argument, and a
warning is emitted. Pass the argument as a hash instead of keywords
to avoid the warning and ensure correct behavior in Ruby 3.
def foo(h, **kw); end; foo(key: 42) # warned
def foo(h, key: 42); end; foo(key: 42) # warned
def foo(h, **kw); end; foo({key: 42}) # OK
def foo(h, key: 42); end; foo({key: 42}) # OK
* When a method accepts specific keywords but not a keyword splat, and
a hash or keywords splat is passed to the method that includes both
Symbol and non-Symbol keys, the hash will continue to be split, and
a warning will be emitted. You will need to update the calling code
to pass separate hashes to ensure correct behavior in Ruby 3.
def foo(h={}, key: 42); end; foo("key" => 43, key: 42) # warned
def foo(h={}, key: 42); end; foo({"key" => 43, key: 42}) # warned
def foo(h={}, key: 42); end; foo({"key" => 43}, key: 42) # OK
* If a method does not accept keywords, and is called with keywords,
the keywords are still treated as a positional hash, with no warning.
This behavior will continue to work in Ruby 3.
def foo(opt={}); end; foo( key: 42 ) # OK
* Non-symbols are allowed as keyword argument keys if the method accepts
arbitrary keywords. [Feature #14183]
* Non-Symbol keys in a keyword arguments hash were prohibited in 2.6.0,
but are now allowed again. [Bug #15658]
def foo(**kw); p kw; end; foo("str" => 1) #=> {"str"=>1}
* **nil
is allowed in method definitions to explicitly mark
that the method accepts no keywords. Calling such a method with keywords
will result in an ArgumentError. [Feature #14183]
def foo(h, **nil); end; foo(key: 1) # ArgumentError
def foo(h, **nil); end; foo(**{key: 1}) # ArgumentError
def foo(h, **nil); end; foo("str" => 1) # ArgumentError
def foo(h, **nil); end; foo({key: 1}) # OK
def foo(h, **nil); end; foo({"str" => 1}) # OK
* Passing an empty keyword splat to a method that does not accept keywords
no longer passes an empty hash, unless the empty hash is necessary for
a required parameter, in which case a warning will be emitted. Remove
the double splat to continue passing a positional hash. [Feature #14183]
h = {}; def foo(*a) a end; foo(**h) # []
h = {}; def foo(a) a end; foo(**h) # {} and warning
h = {}; def foo(*a) a end; foo(h) # [{}]
h = {}; def foo(a) a end; foo(h) # {}
* Above warnings can be suppressed also with {-W:no-deprecated option}[#label-Warning+option].
==== Numbered parameters
* Numbered parameters as default block parameters are introduced. [Feature #4475]
[1, 2, 10].map { _1.to_s(16) } #=> ["1", "2", "a"]
[[1, 2], [3, 4]].map { _1 + _2 } #=> [3, 7]
You can still define a local variable named +_1+ and so on,
and that is honored when present, but renders a warning.
_1 = 0 #=> warning: `_1' is reserved for numbered parameter; consider another name
[1].each { p _1 } # prints 0 instead of 1
==== proc/lambda without block is deprecated
* Proc.new and Kernel#proc with no block in a method called with a block will
now display a warning.
def foo
proc
end
foo { puts "Hello" } #=> warning: Capturing the given block using Kernel#proc is deprecated; use `&block` instead
This warning can be suppressed with {-W:no-deprecated option}[#label-Warning+option].
* Kernel#lambda with no block in a method called with a block raises an exception.
def bar
lambda
end
bar { puts "Hello" } #=> tried to create Proc object without a block (ArgumentError)
==== Other miscellaneous changes
* A beginless range is experimentally introduced. It might be useful
in +case+, new call-sequence of the Comparable#clamp
,
constants and DSLs. [Feature #14799]
ary[..3] # identical to ary[0..3]
case RUBY_VERSION
when ..."2.4" then puts "EOL"
# ...
end
age.clamp(..100)
where(sales: ..100)
* Setting $;
to a non-nil value will now display a warning. [Feature #14240]
This includes the usage in String#split.
This warning can be suppressed with {-W:no-deprecated option}[#label-Warning+option].
* Setting $,
to a non-nil value will now display a warning. [Feature #14240]
This includes the usage in Array#join.
This warning can be suppressed with {-W:no-deprecated option}[#label-Warning+option].
* Quoted here-document identifiers must end within the same line.
<<"EOS
" # This had been warned since 2.4; Now it raises a SyntaxError
EOS
* The flip-flop syntax deprecation is reverted. [Feature #5400]
* Comment lines can be placed between fluent dot now.
foo
# .bar
.baz # => foo.baz
* Calling a private method with a literal +self+ as the receiver
is now allowed. [Feature #11297] [Feature #16123]
* Modifier rescue now operates the same for multiple assignment as single
assignment. [Bug #8279]
a, b = raise rescue [1, 2]
# Previously parsed as: (a, b = raise) rescue [1, 2]
# Now parsed as: a, b = (raise rescue [1, 2])
* +yield+ in singleton class syntax will now display a warning. This behavior
will soon be deprecated. [Feature #15575].
def foo
class << Object.new
yield #=> warning: `yield' in class syntax will not be supported from Ruby 3.0. [Feature #15575]
end
end
foo { p :ok }
This warning can be suppressed with {-W:no-deprecated option}[#label-Warning+option].
* Argument forwarding by (...)
is introduced. [Feature #16253]
def foo(...)
bar(...)
end
All arguments to +foo+ are forwarded to +bar+, including keyword and
block arguments.
Note that the parentheses are mandatory. bar ...
is parsed
as an endless range.
* Access and setting of $SAFE
will now always display a warning.
$SAFE
will become a normal global variable in Ruby 3.0. [Feature #16131]
* Object#{taint,untaint,trust,untrust}
and related functions in the C-API
no longer have an effect (all objects are always considered untainted), and will now
display a warning in verbose mode. This warning will be disabled even in non-verbose mode in
Ruby 3.0, and the methods and C functions will be removed in Ruby 3.2. [Feature #16131]
* Refinements take place at Object#method and Module#instance_method. [Feature #15373]
=== Command line options
==== Warning option
The +-W+ option has been extended with a following +:+, to manage categorized
warnings. [Feature #16345] [Feature #16420]
* To suppress deprecation warnings:
$ ruby -e '$; = ""'
-e:1: warning: `$;' is deprecated
$ ruby -W:no-deprecated -e '$; = //'
* It works with the +RUBYOPT+ environment variable:
$ RUBYOPT=-W:no-deprecated ruby -e '$; = //'
* To suppress experimental feature warnings:
$ ruby -e '0 in a'
-e:1: warning: Pattern matching is experimental, and the behavior may change in future versions of Ruby!
$ ruby -W:no-experimental -e '0 in a'
* To suppress both by using +RUBYOPT+, set space separated values:
$ RUBYOPT='-W:no-deprecated -W:no-experimental' ruby -e '($; = "") in a'
See also Warning in {Core classes updates}[#label-Core+classes+updates+-28outstanding+ones+only-29].
=== Core classes updates (outstanding ones only)
[Array]
[New methods]
* Added Array#intersection. [Feature #16155]
* Added Array#minmax, with a faster implementation than Enumerable#minmax. [Bug #15929]
[Comparable]
[Modified method]
* Comparable#clamp now accepts a Range argument. [Feature #14784]
-1.clamp(0..2) #=> 0
1.clamp(0..2) #=> 1
3.clamp(0..2) #=> 2
# With beginless and endless ranges:
-1.clamp(0..) #=> 0
3.clamp(..2) #=> 2
[Complex]
[New method]
* Added Complex#<=>.
So 0 <=> 0i
will not raise NoMethodError. [Bug #15857]
[Dir]
[Modified methods]
* Dir.glob and Dir.[] no longer allow NUL-separated glob pattern.
Use Array instead. [Feature #14643]
[Encoding]
[New encoding]
* Added new encoding CESU-8. [Feature #15931]
[Enumerable]
[New methods]
* Added Enumerable#filter_map. [Feature #15323]
[1, 2, 3].filter_map {|x| x.odd? ? x.to_s : nil } #=> ["1", "3"]
* Added Enumerable#tally. [Feature #11076]
["A", "B", "C", "B", "A"].tally #=> {"A"=>2, "B"=>2, "C"=>1}
[Enumerator]
[New methods]
* Added Enumerator.produce to generate an Enumerator from any custom
data transformation. [Feature #14781]
require "date"
dates = Enumerator.produce(Date.today, &:succ) #=> infinite sequence of dates
dates.detect(&:tuesday?) #=> next Tuesday
* Added Enumerator::Lazy#eager that generates a non-lazy enumerator
from a lazy enumerator. [Feature #15901]
a = %w(foo bar baz)
e = a.lazy.map {|x| x.upcase }.map {|x| x + "!" }.eager
p e.class #=> Enumerator
p e.map {|x| x + "?" } #=> ["FOO!?", "BAR!?", "BAZ!?"]
* Added Enumerator::Yielder#to_proc so that a Yielder object
can be directly passed to another method as a block
argument. [Feature #15618]
* Added Enumerator::Lazy#with_index be lazy
Previously, Enumerator::Lazy#with_index was not defined, so it
picked up the default implementation from Enumerator, which was
not lazy. [Bug #7877]
("a"..).lazy.with_index(1) { |it, index| puts "#{index}:#{it}" }.take(3).force
# => 1:a
# 2:b
# 3:c
[Fiber]
[New method]
* Added Fiber#raise that behaves like Fiber#resume but raises an
exception on the resumed fiber. [Feature #10344]
[File]
[New method]
* Added File.absolute_path? to check whether a path is absolute or
not in a portable way. [Feature #15868]
File.absolute_path?("/foo") # => true (on *nix)
File.absolute_path?("C:/foo") # => true (on Windows)
File.absolute_path?("foo") # => false
[Modified method]
* File.extname now returns a dot string for names ending with a dot on
non-Windows platforms. [Bug #15267]
File.extname("foo.") #=> "."
[FrozenError]
[New method]
* Added FrozenError#receiver to return the frozen object on which
modification was attempted. To set this object when raising
FrozenError in Ruby code, FrozenError.new accepts a +:receiver+
option. [Feature #15751]
[GC]
[New method]
* Added GC.compact method for compacting the heap.
This function compacts live objects in the heap so that fewer pages may
be used, and the heap may be more CoW (copy-on-write) friendly. [Feature #15626]
Details on the algorithm and caveats can be found here:
https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/15626
[IO]
[New method]
* Added IO#set_encoding_by_bom to check the BOM and set the external
encoding. [Bug #15210]
[Integer]
[Modified method]
* Integer#[] now supports range operations. [Feature #8842]
0b01001101[2, 4] #=> 0b0011
0b01001100[2..5] #=> 0b0011
0b01001100[2...6] #=> 0b0011
# ^^^^
[Method]
[Modified method]
* Method#inspect shows more information. [Feature #14145]
[Module]
[New methods]
* Added Module#const_source_location to retrieve the location where a
constant is defined. [Feature #10771]
* Added Module#ruby2_keywords for marking a method as passing keyword
arguments through a regular argument splat, useful when delegating
all arguments to another method in a way that can be backwards
compatible with older Ruby versions. [Bug #16154]
[Modified methods]
* Module#autoload? now takes an +inherit+ optional argument, like
Module#const_defined?. [Feature #15777]
* Module#name now always returns a frozen String. The returned String is
always the same for a given Module. This change is
experimental. [Feature #16150]
[NilClass / TrueClass / FalseClass]
[Modified methods]
* NilClass#to_s, TrueClass#to_s, and FalseClass#to_s now always return a
frozen String. The returned String is always the same for each of these
values. This change is experimental. [Feature #16150]
[ObjectSpace::WeakMap]
[Modified method]
* ObjectSpace::WeakMap#[]= now accepts special objects as either key or
values. [Feature #16035]
[Proc]
[New method]
* Added Proc#ruby2_keywords for marking the proc as passing keyword
arguments through a regular argument splat, useful when delegating
all arguments to another method or proc in a way that can be backwards
compatible with older Ruby versions. [Feature #16404]
[Range]
[New method]
* Added Range#minmax, with a faster implementation than Enumerable#minmax.
It returns a maximum that now corresponds to Range#max. [Bug #15807]
[Modified method]
* Range#=== now uses Range#cover? for String arguments, too (in Ruby 2.6, it was
changed from Range#include? for all types except strings). [Bug #15449]
[RubyVM]
[Removed method]
* +RubyVM.resolve_feature_path+ moved to
$LOAD_PATH.resolve_feature_path
. [Feature #15903] [Feature #15230]
[String]
[Unicode]
* Update Unicode version and Emoji version from 11.0.0 to
12.0.0. [Feature #15321]
* Update Unicode version to 12.1.0, adding support for
U+32FF SQUARE ERA NAME REIWA. [Feature #15195]
* Update Unicode Emoji version to 12.1. [Feature #16272]
[Symbol]
[New methods]
* Added Symbol#start_with? and Symbol#end_with? methods. [Feature #16348]
[Time]
[New methods]
* Added Time#ceil method. [Feature #15772]
* Added Time#floor method. [Feature #15653]
[Modified method]
* Time#inspect is separated from Time#to_s and it shows
the time's sub second. [Feature #15958]
[UnboundMethod]
[New method]
* Added UnboundMethod#bind_call method. [Feature #15955]
umethod.bind_call(obj, ...)
is semantically equivalent
to umethod.bind(obj).call(...)
. This idiom is used in
some libraries to call a method that is overridden. The added
method does the same without allocation of an intermediate Method
object.
class Foo
def add_1(x)
x + 1
end
end
class Bar < Foo
def add_1(x) # override
x + 2
end
end
obj = Bar.new
p obj.add_1(1) #=> 3
p Foo.instance_method(:add_1).bind(obj).call(1) #=> 2
p Foo.instance_method(:add_1).bind_call(obj, 1) #=> 2
[Warning]
[New methods]
* Added Warning.[] and Warning.[]= to manage emitting/suppressing
some categories of warnings. [Feature #16345] [Feature #16420]
[$LOAD_PATH]
[New method]
* Added $LOAD_PATH.resolve_feature_path
. [Feature #15903] [Feature #15230]
=== Stdlib updates (outstanding ones only)
[Bundler]
* Upgrade to Bundler 2.1.2.
See https://github.com/bundler/bundler/releases/tag/v2.1.2
[CGI]
* CGI.escapeHTML becomes 2~5x faster when there is at least one escaped character.
See https://github.com/ruby/ruby/pull/2226
[CSV]
* Upgrade to 3.1.2.
See https://github.com/ruby/csv/blob/master/NEWS.md.
[Date]
* Date.jisx0301, Date#jisx0301, and Date.parse support the new Japanese
era. [Feature #15742]
[Delegator]
* Object#DelegateClass accepts a block and module_evals it in the context
of the returned class, similar to Class.new and Struct.new.
[ERB]
* Prohibit marshaling ERB instance.
[IRB]
* Introduce syntax highlighting inspired by the Pry gem to Binding#irb
source lines, REPL input, and inspect output of some core-class objects.
* Introduce multiline editing mode provided by Reline.
* Show documentation when completion.
* Enable auto indent and save/load history by default.
[JSON]
* Upgrade to 2.3.0.
[Net::FTP]
* Add Net::FTP#features to check available features, and Net::FTP#option to
enable/disable each of them. [Feature #15964]
[Net::HTTP]
* Add +ipaddr+ optional parameter to Net::HTTP#start to replace the address for
the TCP/IP connection. [Feature #5180]
[Net::IMAP]
* Add Server Name Indication (SNI) support. [Feature #15594]
[open-uri]
* Warn open-uri's "open" method at Kernel.
Use URI.open instead. [Misc #15893]
* The default charset of "text/*" media type is UTF-8 instead of
ISO-8859-1. [Bug #15933]
[OptionParser]
* Now show "Did you mean?" for unknown options. [Feature #16256]
test.rb:
require "optparse"
OptionParser.new do |opts|
opts.on("-f", "--foo", "foo") {|v| }
opts.on("-b", "--bar", "bar") {|v| }
opts.on("-c", "--baz", "baz") {|v| }
end.parse!
example:
$ ruby test.rb --baa
Traceback (most recent call last):
test.rb:7:in `': invalid option: --baa (OptionParser::InvalidOption)
Did you mean? baz
bar
[Pathname]
* Pathname.glob now delegates 3 arguments to Dir.glob
to accept +base+ keyword. [Feature #14405]
[Racc]
* Merge 1.4.15 from upstream repository and added cli of racc.
[Reline]
* New stdlib that is compatible with the readline stdlib but is
implemented in pure Ruby. It also provides a multiline editing mode.
[REXML]
* Upgrade to 3.2.3.
See https://github.com/ruby/rexml/blob/master/NEWS.md.
[RSS]
* Upgrade to RSS 0.2.8.
See https://github.com/ruby/rss/blob/master/NEWS.md.
[RubyGems]
* Upgrade to RubyGems 3.1.2.
* https://github.com/rubygems/rubygems/releases/tag/v3.1.0
* https://github.com/rubygems/rubygems/releases/tag/v3.1.1
* https://github.com/rubygems/rubygems/releases/tag/v3.1.2
[StringScanner]
* Upgrade to 1.0.3.
See https://github.com/ruby/strscan/blob/master/NEWS.md.
=== Compatibility issues (excluding feature bug fixes)
* The following libraries are no longer bundled gems.
Install corresponding gems to use these features.
* CMath (cmath gem)
* Scanf (scanf gem)
* Shell (shell gem)
* Synchronizer (sync gem)
* ThreadsWait (thwait gem)
* E2MM (e2mmap gem)
[Proc]
* The Proc#to_s format was changed. [Feature #16101]
[Range]
* Range#minmax used to iterate on the range to determine the maximum.
It now uses the same algorithm as Range#max. In rare cases (e.g.
ranges of Floats or Strings), this may yield different results. [Bug #15807]
=== Stdlib compatibility issues (excluding feature bug fixes)
* Promote stdlib to default gems
* The following default gems were published on rubygems.org
* benchmark
* cgi
* delegate
* getoptlong
* net-pop
* net-smtp
* open3
* pstore
* readline
* readline-ext
* singleton
* The following default gems were only promoted at ruby-core,
but not yet published on rubygems.org.
* monitor
* observer
* timeout
* tracer
* uri
* yaml
* The did_you_mean gem has been promoted up to a default gem from a bundled gem
[pathname]
* Kernel#Pathname when called with a Pathname argument now returns
the argument instead of creating a new Pathname. This is more
similar to other Kernel methods, but can break code that modifies
the return value and expects the argument not to be modified.
[profile.rb, Profiler__]
* Removed from standard library. It was unmaintained since Ruby 2.0.0.
=== C API updates
* Many *_kw
functions have been added for setting whether
the final argument being passed should be treated as keywords. You
may need to switch to these functions to avoid keyword argument
separation warnings, and to ensure correct behavior in Ruby 3.
* The :
character in rb_scan_args format string is now
treated as keyword arguments. Passing a positional hash instead of
keyword arguments will emit a deprecation warning.
* C API declarations with +ANYARGS+ are changed not to use +ANYARGS+.
See https://github.com/ruby/ruby/pull/2404
=== Implementation improvements
[Fiber]
* Allow selecting different coroutine implementations by using
+--with-coroutine=+, e.g.
$ ./configure --with-coroutine=ucontext
$ ./configure --with-coroutine=copy
* Replace previous stack cache with fiber pool cache. The fiber pool
allocates many stacks in a single memory region. Stack allocation
becomes O(log N) and fiber creation is amortized O(1). Around 10x
performance improvement was measured in micro-benchmarks.
https://github.com/ruby/ruby/pull/2224
[File]
* File.realpath now uses realpath(3) on many platforms, which can
significantly improve performance. [Feature #15797]
[Hash]
* Change data structure of small Hash objects. [Feature #15602]
[Monitor]
* Monitor class is written in C-extension. [Feature #16255]
[Thread]
* VM stack memory allocation is now combined with native thread stack,
improving thread allocation performance and reducing allocation related
failures. Around 10x performance improvement was measured in micro-benchmarks.
[JIT]
* JIT-ed code is recompiled to less-optimized code when an optimization assumption is invalidated.
* Method inlining is performed when a method is considered as pure.
This optimization is still experimental and many methods are NOT considered as pure yet.
* The default value of +--jit-max-cache+ is changed from 1,000 to 100.
* The default value of +--jit-min-calls+ is changed from 5 to 10,000.
[RubyVM]
* Per-call-site method cache, which has been there since around 1.9, was
improved: cache hit rate raised from 89% to 94%.
See https://github.com/ruby/ruby/pull/2583
[RubyVM::InstructionSequence]
* RubyVM::InstructionSequence#to_binary method generates compiled binary.
The binary size is reduced. [Feature #16163]
=== Miscellaneous changes
* Support for IA64 architecture has been removed. Hardware for testing was
difficult to find, native fiber code is difficult to implement, and it added
non-trivial complexity to the interpreter. [Feature #15894]
* Require compilers to support C99. [Misc #15347]
* Details of our dialect: https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/projects/ruby-master/wiki/C99
* Ruby's upstream repository is changed from Subversion to Git.
* https://git.ruby-lang.org/ruby.git
* RUBY_REVISION class is changed from Integer to String.
* RUBY_DESCRIPTION includes Git revision instead of Subversion's one.
* Support built-in methods in Ruby with the _\_builtin_
syntax. [Feature #16254]
Some methods are defined in *.rb (such as trace_point.rb).
For example, it is easy to define a method which accepts keyword arguments.