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Feature #8848

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Syntax for binary strings

Added by duerst (Martin Dürst) about 11 years ago. Updated almost 3 years ago.

Status:
Open
Assignee:
-
Target version:
-
[ruby-core:56924]

Description

In commit 37486, Yui (Naruse) added a String#b method as proposed in http://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/6767.

String#b was added to allow easy generation of binary strings; this became necessary in particular after the source file encoding was changed to UTF-8.

However, as also recognized in http://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/6767, in the long term (ideally starting with Ruby 2.1) it would be better to make binary strings available as part of Ruby syntax.

One reason for this efficiency. String#b creates a duplicate object, which is not at all necessary for the frequent use case of String literals.

Another reason is encoding validity. To be able to e.g. create a "\xFF" binary string, with String#b in an UTF-8 source context, it is necessary to allow "\xFF" (temporarily at least) as an (actually invalid) UTF-8 string. This may be difficult for some implementations, and isn't desirable in general.

Regarding syntax, there are mainly two solutions:

  1. a '%b' prefix
  2. a 'b' suffix

The preferable syntax depends on the overall future approach of Ruby to String literal suffixes (see https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/8579).


Related issues 1 (1 open0 closed)

Related to Ruby master - Feature #10391: Provide %eISO-8859-1'string \xAA literal' string literals with explicit encodingOpen10/16/2014Actions
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