Is there a good way to read, edit, and write files in place in Ruby.
In my online search I've found stuff suggesting to read it all into an array, modify said array, then write everything out. I feel like there should be a better solution, especially if I'm dealing with a very big file.
Something like:
myfile = File.open("path/to/file.txt", "r+")
myfile.each do |line|
myfile.replace_puts('blah') if line =~ /myregex/
end
myfile.close
Where replace_puts would write over the current line, rather than (over)writing the next line as it currently does because the pointer is at the end of the line (after the separator).
So then every line that matches /myregex/ will be replaced with 'blah'. Obviously what I have in mind is a bit more involved than that, as far as processing, and would be done in one line, but the idea is the same - I want to read a file line by line, and edit certain lines, and write out when I'm done.
Maybe there's a way to just say "rewind back to just after the last separator"? Or some way of using each_with_index and write via a line index number? I couldn't find anything of the sort, though.
The best solution I have so far is to read things line-wise, write them out to a new (temp) file line-wise (possibly edited), then overwrite the old file with the new temp file and delete. Again, I feel like there should be a better way - I don't think I should have to create a new 1gig file just to edit some lines in an existing 1 gig file.
Thanks in advance for your advice!