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Bug #18797

closed

Third argument to Regexp.new is a bit broken

Added by janosch-x (Janosch Mรผller) over 2 years ago. Updated over 1 year ago.


Description

Situation

'n' or 'N' can be passed as a third argument to Regexp.new. However, the behavior is not the same as the literal n-flag or the Regexp::NOENCODING option, and it makes the #encoding of Regexp and Regexp#source diverge:

/๐Ÿ˜…/n # => SyntaxError
Regexp.new('๐Ÿ˜…', Regexp::NOENCODING) # => RegexpError
re = Regexp.new('๐Ÿ˜…', nil, 'n') # => /๐Ÿ˜…/
re.options == Regexp::NOENCODING # => true
re.encoding # => ASCII-8BIT
re.source.encoding # => UTF-8
re =~ '๐Ÿ˜…' # => Encoding::CompatibilityError

Code

Here. There is also a test for the resulting encoding here, but it is a no-op because the whole file is set to that encoding via magic comment anyway.

The third argument was added when ASCII was still the default Ruby encoding, so I guess Regexp and source encoding still matched at that point.

Solution

It could be fixed, but my impression is that it is not useful anymore.

It was probably only added because Regexp::NOENCODING wasn't available at the time, so I think it could be deprecated like so:

Passing a third argument to Regexp.new is deprecated. Use Regexp::NOENCODING as second argument instead.


Related issues 1 (0 open1 closed)

Related to Ruby master - Bug #20084: Breaking change with Regexp.new on 3.3.0ClosedActions
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