ruby-changes:38325
From: hsbt <ko1@a...>
Date: Thu, 30 Apr 2015 17:02:47 +0900 (JST)
Subject: [ruby-changes:38325] hsbt:r50406 (trunk): * rational.c: Added documentation for rational literal.
hsbt 2015-04-30 17:02:38 +0900 (Thu, 30 Apr 2015) New Revision: 50406 http://svn.ruby-lang.org/cgi-bin/viewvc.cgi?view=revision&revision=50406 Log: * rational.c: Added documentation for rational literal. [Bug #11075][fix GH-885][ci skip] Patch by @shishir127 Modified files: trunk/ChangeLog trunk/rational.c Index: ChangeLog =================================================================== --- ChangeLog (revision 50405) +++ ChangeLog (revision 50406) @@ -1,3 +1,8 @@ https://github.com/ruby/ruby/blob/trunk/ChangeLog#L1 +Thu Apr 30 17:02:33 2015 SHIBATA Hiroshi <hsbt@r...> + + * rational.c: Added documentation for rational literal. + [Bug #11075][fix GH-885][ci skip] Patch by @shishir127 + Thu Apr 30 16:39:44 2015 Nobuyoshi Nakada <nobu@r...> * ext/socket/ipsocket.c (init_inetsock_internal): preserve errno Index: rational.c =================================================================== --- rational.c (revision 50405) +++ rational.c (revision 50406) @@ -2465,13 +2465,14 @@ nurat_s_convert(int argc, VALUE *argv, V https://github.com/ruby/ruby/blob/trunk/rational.c#L2465 * a/b (b>0). Where a is numerator and b is denominator. Integer a * equals rational a/1 mathematically. * - * In ruby, you can create rational object with Rational, to_r or - * rationalize method. The return values will be irreducible. + * In ruby, you can create rational object with Rational, to_r, + * rationalize method or suffixing r to a literal. The return values will be irreducible. * * Rational(1) #=> (1/1) * Rational(2, 3) #=> (2/3) * Rational(4, -6) #=> (-2/3) * 3.to_r #=> (3/1) + * 2/3r #=> (2/3) * * You can also create rational object from floating-point numbers or * strings. -- ML: ruby-changes@q... Info: http://www.atdot.net/~ko1/quickml/