i wrote a quick little application that takes a base file of code with some keywords, a file of replacements for the keywords, and outputs a new file with the keywords replaced.

When i was using Ruby 1.8, my outputs would look fine. Now when using Ruby 1.9, my replaced code has the newline characters in it instead of line feeds.

For example, i see something like:

["\r\nDim RunningNormal_1 As Boolean", "\r\nDim RunningNormal_2 As Boolean", "\r\nDim RunningNormal_3 As Boolean"]

instead of:

Dim RunningNormal_1 As Boolean
Dim RunningNormal_2 As Boolean
Dim RunningNormal_3 As Boolean

i use a hash of replacements {"KEYWORD"=>["1","2","3"]} and an array of the replaced lines.

i use this block to finish the replacement:

resultingLibs.each do |x|
  libraryString.sub!(/(<REPEAT>(.*?)<\/REPEAT>)/im) do |match|
    x.each do |individual|
      individual.to_s 
    end
  end
end
#for each resulting group of the repeatable pattern,
#  
#Write out the resulting libs to a combined string

My hunch is that i'm printing out the array instead of the strings within the array. Any suggestions on a fix. When i debug and print my replaced string using puts, the output looks correct. When i use the to_s method (which is how my app writes the output to the output file), my output looks wrong.

A fix would be nice, but what i really want to know is what changed between Ruby 1.8 and 1.9 that causes this behavior. Has the to_s method changed somehow in Ruby 1.9?

*i'm inexperienced in Ruby

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sample code would be nice – orip Oct 18 '10 at 15:00
i added the source code that i hope is relevant. – Jugglingnutcase Oct 18 '10 at 15:32
+1. I've been using Ruby 1.8 and 1.9 a fair bit, but never knew about this difference! – Andrew Grimm Oct 18 '10 at 22:19
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2 Answers

up vote 13 down vote accepted

Yes, you're calling to_s on an array of strings. In 1.8 that is equivalent to calling join, in 1.9 it is equivalent to calling inspect.

To get the behavior you want in both 1.8 and 1.9, call join instead of to_s.

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Please see here, under Array

Array#to_s is equivalent to Array#inspect

[1,2,3,4].to_s                                    # => "[1, 2, 3, 4]"

instead of

RUBY_VERSION                                      # => "1.8.5"
[1,2,3,4].to_s                                    # => "1234"
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