I'd do it like this:
lines = []
File.foreach('./test.txt') do |li|
lines << li if (li[/^\*{5}/] ... li[/^\*{5}/])
end
lines[1..-2].map(&:strip).select{ |l| l > '' }
# => ["useful1 text", "useful3 text"]
/^\*{5}/
means "A string that starts with and has at least five '*
'.
...
is one of two uses of ..
and ...
and, in this use, is commonly called a "flip-flop" operator. It isn't used often in Ruby because most people don't seem to understand it. It's sometimes mistaken for the Range delimiters ..
and ...
.
In this use, Ruby watches for the first test, li[/^\*{5}/]
to return true. Once it does, ..
or ...
will return true until the second condition returns true. In this case we're looking for the same delimiter, so the same test will work, li[/^\*{5}/]
, and is where the difference between the two versions, ..
and ...
come into play.
..
will return toggle back to false immediately, whereas ...
will wait to look at the next line, which avoids the problem of the first seeing a delimiter and then the second seeing the same line and triggering.
That lets the test assign to lines
, which, prior to the [1..-2].map(&:strip).select{ |l| l > '' }
looks like:
# => ["*********************\n",
# "\n",
# "useful1 text\n",
# "\n",
# "useful3 text\n",
# "\n",
# "*********************\n"]
[1..-2].map(&:strip).select{ |l| l > '' }
cleans that up by slicing the array to remove the first and last elements, strip
removes leading and trailing whitespace, effectively getting rid of the trailing newlines and resulting in empty lines and strings containing the desired text. select{ |l| l > '' }
picks up the lines that are greater than "empty" lines, i.e., are not empty.
See "When would a Ruby flip-flop be useful?" and its related questions, and "What is a flip-flop operator?" for more information and some background. (Perl programmers use ..
and ...
often, for just this purpose.)
One warning though: If the file has multiple blocks delimited this way, you'll get the contents of them all. The code I wrote doesn't know how to stop until the end-of-file is reached, so you'll have to figure out how to handle that situation if it could occur.