kddnewton (Kevin Newton) wrote in #note-3:
I looked into this this morning, it looks like ruby.c is automatically concatenating a \n onto the -e script here: https://github.com/ruby/ruby/blob/f43585b02c3634ab9a4e54049b08e04ab1a640fd/ruby.c#L1303. Is this desired behavior?
I'm not sure if it matters. If you have a script with one line (that has a newline), Prism will report line 2 as the error.
[aaron@tc-lan-adapter ~/g/ruby (master)]$ cat x.rb
foo(
[aaron@tc-lan-adapter ~/g/ruby (master)]$ od -c x.rb
0000000 f o o ( \n
0000005
[aaron@tc-lan-adapter ~/g/ruby (master)]$ wc -l x.rb
1 x.rb
[aaron@tc-lan-adapter ~/g/ruby (master)]$ ./miniruby x.rb
x.rb: x.rb:2: syntax error found (SyntaxError)
1 | foo(
> 2 |
| ^ unexpected end-of-input; expected a `)` to close the arguments
[aaron@tc-lan-adapter ~/g/ruby (master)]$
It's fine for newlines to appear in method parameters as well as blocks, so Prism considers the EOF token to be the "error token". Indeed EOF "occurs" on line 2 (since it's after the newline), but since nobody writes EOF in to their files, I think we should consider the error to have occurred at the newline preceding EOF.
One more example:
[aaron@tc-lan-adapter ~/g/ruby (master)]$ cat x.rb
foo(
[aaron@tc-lan-adapter ~/g/ruby (master)]$ wc -l x.rb
5 x.rb
[aaron@tc-lan-adapter ~/g/ruby (master)]$ od -c x.rb
0000000 f o o ( \n \n \n \n \n
0000011
[aaron@tc-lan-adapter ~/g/ruby (master)]$ ./miniruby x.rb
x.rb: x.rb:6: syntax error found (SyntaxError)
4 |
5 |
> 6 |
| ^ unexpected end-of-input; expected a `)` to close the arguments
[aaron@tc-lan-adapter ~/g/ruby (master)]$
Most tools agree the above file only has 5 lines in it, but Prism reports the error on line 6. IMO errors should only occur on lines that exist.