5

Lets say I have the object line from class Line:

class Line
  def initialize point1, point2
    @p1 = point1
    @p2 = point2
  end
end

line = Line.new...

How can I binary serialize the line object? I tried with:

data = Marshal::dump(line, "path/to/still/unexisting/file")

but it created file and didn't add anything. I read the Class: IO documentation but I couldn't really get it.

2
  • 1
    Marshal isn't a good choice for persistent storage, the binary format depends on the specific Ruby version you're using. You're better off using a generic format like JSON, YAML, XML, ... Feb 2, 2014 at 22:17
  • @muistooshort it's a great choice if you are comfortable with recreating it if the ruby version changes, and you have lots of data/vars that you need saved. It's also pretty fast. Jan 12, 2022 at 1:07

1 Answer 1

11

Like this:

class Line
  attr_reader :p1, :p2
  def initialize point1, point2
    @p1 = point1
    @p2 = point2
  end
end

line = Line.new([1,2], [3,4])

Save line:

FNAME = 'my_file'

File.open(FNAME, 'wb') {|f| f.write(Marshal.dump(line))}

Retrieve into line1:

line1 = Marshal.load(File.binread(FNAME))

Confirm it works:

line1.p1 # => [1, 2]
2
  • 1
    Why File.open(FNAME, 'wb') {|f| f.write(Marshal.dump(line))} works well, but using f = File.open(FNAME, 'wb') and f.write(Marshal.dump(line)) causes 'marshal data too short (ArgumentError)' when loading? Mar 19, 2019 at 11:55
  • 2
    @KaRolthas, interesting question. The answer is that when open is used with a block the file is closed after the block is executed. When open does not have a block you need to close the file (f.close) after writing. If you don't close the file File.binread(FNAME) attempts to read an open file, causing the error. Mar 19, 2019 at 16:57

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