Type:
Class

StringScanner provides for lexical scanning operations on a String. Here is an example of its usage:

1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
s = StringScanner.new('This is an example string')
s.eos?               # -> false
 
p s.scan(/\w+/)      # -> "This"
p s.scan(/\w+/)      # -> nil
p s.scan(/\s+/)      # -> " "
p s.scan(/\s+/)      # -> nil
p s.scan(/\w+/)      # -> "is"
s.eos?               # -> false
 
p s.scan(/\s+/)      # -> " "
p s.scan(/\w+/)      # -> "an"
p s.scan(/\s+/)      # -> " "
p s.scan(/\w+/)      # -> "example"
p s.scan(/\s+/)      # -> " "
p s.scan(/\w+/)      # -> "string"
s.eos?               # -> true
 
p s.scan(/\s+/)      # -> nil
p s.scan(/\w+/)      # -> nil

Scanning a string means remembering the position of a scan pointer, which is just an index. The point of scanning is to move forward a bit at a time, so matches are sought after the scan pointer; usually immediately after it.

Given the string “test string”, here are the pertinent scan pointer positions:

1
2
3
  t e s t   s t r i n g
0 1 2 ...             1
                      0

When you scan for a pattern (a regular expression), the match must occur at the character after the scan pointer. If you use scan_until, then the match can occur anywhere after the scan pointer. In both cases, the scan pointer moves just beyond the last character of the match, ready to scan again from the next character onwards. This is demonstrated by the example above.

Method Categories

There are other methods besides the plain scanners. You can look ahead in the string without actually scanning. You can access the most recent match. You can modify the string being scanned, reset or terminate the scanner, find out or change the position of the scan pointer, skip ahead, and so on.

Advancing the Scan Pointer

Looking Ahead

Finding Where we Are

Setting Where we Are

Match Data

Miscellaneous

There are aliases to several of the methods.

exist?
  • References/Ruby on Rails/Ruby/Classes/StringScanner

exist?(pattern) Instance Public methods Looks ahead to see if the

2025-01-10 15:47:30
scan
  • References/Ruby on Rails/Ruby/Classes/StringScanner

scan(pattern) => String Instance Public methods Tries to match with pattern

2025-01-10 15:47:30
pre_match
  • References/Ruby on Rails/Ruby/Classes/StringScanner

pre_match() Instance Public methods Return the pre-match

2025-01-10 15:47:30
inspect
  • References/Ruby on Rails/Ruby/Classes/StringScanner

inspect() Instance Public methods Returns a string that represents the

2025-01-10 15:47:30
new
  • References/Ruby on Rails/Ruby/Classes/StringScanner

StringScanner.new(string, dup = false) Class Public methods Creates a new

2025-01-10 15:47:30
empty?
  • References/Ruby on Rails/Ruby/Classes/StringScanner

empty?() Instance Public methods Equivalent to

2025-01-10 15:47:30
concat
  • References/Ruby on Rails/Ruby/Classes/StringScanner

concat(str) Instance Public methods Appends str to the string being

2025-01-10 15:47:30
eos?
  • References/Ruby on Rails/Ruby/Classes/StringScanner

eos?() Instance Public methods Returns true if the scan pointer

2025-01-10 15:47:30
check
  • References/Ruby on Rails/Ruby/Classes/StringScanner

check(pattern) Instance Public methods This returns the value that

2025-01-10 15:47:30
skip_until
  • References/Ruby on Rails/Ruby/Classes/StringScanner

skip_until(pattern) Instance Public methods Advances the scan pointer until

2025-01-10 15:47:30