mirror of
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563 lines
12 KiB
Markdown
563 lines
12 KiB
Markdown
---
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language: crystal
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filename: learncrystal.cr
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contributors:
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- ["Vitalii Elenhaupt", "http://veelenga.com"]
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- ["Arnaud Fernandés", "https://github.com/TechMagister/"]
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- ["Valentin Baca", "https://github.com/valbaca/"]
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---
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```crystal
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# This is a comment
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# Everything is an object
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nil.class #=> Nil
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100.class #=> Int32
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true.class #=> Bool
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# Falsey values are: nil, false and null pointers
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!nil #=> true : Bool
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!false #=> true : Bool
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!0 #=> false : Bool
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# Integers
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1.class #=> Int32
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# Five signed integer types
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1_i8.class #=> Int8
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1_i16.class #=> Int16
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1_i32.class #=> Int32
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1_i64.class #=> Int64
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1_i128.class #=> Int128
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# Five unsigned integer types
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1_u8.class #=> UInt8
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1_u16.class #=> UInt16
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1_u32.class #=> UInt32
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1_u64.class #=> UInt64
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1_u128.class #=> UInt128
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2147483648.class #=> Int64
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9223372036854775808.class #=> UInt64
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# Binary numbers
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0b1101 #=> 13 : Int32
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# Octal numbers
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0o123 #=> 83 : Int32
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# Hexadecimal numbers
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0xFE012D #=> 16646445 : Int32
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0xfe012d #=> 16646445 : Int32
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# Floats
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1.0.class #=> Float64
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# There are two floating point types
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1.0_f32.class #=> Float32
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1_f32.class #=> Float32
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1e10.class #=> Float64
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1.5e10.class #=> Float64
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1.5e-7.class #=> Float64
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# Chars use 'a' pair of single quotes
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'a'.class #=> Char
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# Chars are 32-bit unicode
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'あ' #=> 'あ' : Char
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# Unicode codepoint
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'\u0041' #=> 'A' : Char
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# Strings use a "pair" of double quotes
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"s".class #=> String
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# Strings are immutable
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s = "hello, " #=> "hello, " : String
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s.object_id #=> 134667712 : UInt64
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s += "Crystal"
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s #=> "hello, Crystal" : String
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s.object_id #=> 142528472 : UInt64
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# Supports interpolation
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"sum = #{1 + 2}" #=> "sum = 3" : String
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# Multiline string
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"This is
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multiline string" #=> "This is\n multiline string"
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# String with double quotes
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%(hello "world") #=> "hello \"world\""
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# Symbols
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# Immutable, reusable constants represented internally as Int32 integer value.
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# They're often used instead of strings to efficiently convey specific,
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# meaningful values
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:symbol.class #=> Symbol
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sentence = :question? # :"question?" : Symbol
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sentence == :question? #=> true : Bool
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sentence == :exclamation! #=> false : Bool
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sentence == "question?" #=> false : Bool
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# Arrays
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[1, 2, 3].class #=> Array(Int32)
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[1, "hello", 'x'].class #=> Array(Char | Int32 | String)
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# Empty arrays should specify a type
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[] # Syntax error: for empty arrays use '[] of ElementType'
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[] of Int32 #=> [] : Array(Int32)
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Array(Int32).new #=> [] : Array(Int32)
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# Arrays can be indexed
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array = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5] #=> [1, 2, 3, 4, 5] : Array(Int32)
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array[0] #=> 1 : Int32
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array[10] # raises IndexError
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array[-6] # raises IndexError
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array[10]? #=> nil : (Int32 | Nil)
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array[-6]? #=> nil : (Int32 | Nil)
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# From the end
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array[-1] #=> 5
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# With a start index and size
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array[2, 3] #=> [3, 4, 5]
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# Or with range
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array[1..3] #=> [2, 3, 4]
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# Add to an array
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array << 6 #=> [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6]
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# Remove from the end of the array
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array.pop #=> 6
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array #=> [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
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# Remove from the beginning of the array
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array.shift #=> 1
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array #=> [2, 3, 4, 5]
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# Check if an item exists in an array
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array.includes? 3 #=> true
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# Special syntax for an array of string and an array of symbols
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%w(one two three) #=> ["one", "two", "three"] : Array(String)
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%i(one two three) #=> [:one, :two, :three] : Array(Symbol)
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# There is a special array syntax with other types too, as long as
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# they define a .new and a #<< method
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set = Set{1, 2, 3} #=> Set{1, 2, 3}
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set.class #=> Set(Int32)
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# The above is equivalent to
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set = Set(typeof(1, 2, 3)).new #=> Set{} : Set(Int32)
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set << 1 #=> Set{1} : Set(Int32)
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set << 2 #=> Set{1, 2} : Set(Int32)
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set << 3 #=> Set{1, 2, 3} : Set(Int32)
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# Hashes
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{1 => 2, 3 => 4}.class #=> Hash(Int32, Int32)
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{1 => 2, 'a' => 3}.class #=> Hash(Char| Int32, Int32)
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# Empty hashes must specify a type
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{} # Syntax Error: for empty hashes use '{} of KeyType => ValueType'
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{} of Int32 => Int32 # {} : Hash(Int32, Int32)
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Hash(Int32, Int32).new # {} : Hash(Int32, Int32)
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# Hashes can be quickly looked up by key
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hash = {"color" => "green", "number" => 5}
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hash["color"] #=> "green"
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hash["no_such_key"] #=> Missing hash key: "no_such_key" (KeyError)
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hash["no_such_key"]? #=> nil
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# The type of the returned value is based on all key types
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hash["number"] #=> 5 : (Int32 | String)
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# Check existence of keys hash
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hash.has_key? "color" #=> true
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# Special notation for symbol and string keys
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{key1: 'a', key2: 'b'} # {:key1 => 'a', :key2 => 'b'}
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{"key1": 'a', "key2": 'b'} # {"key1" => 'a', "key2" => 'b'}
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# Special hash literal syntax with other types too, as long as
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# they define a .new and a #[]= methods
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class MyType
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def []=(key, value)
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puts "do stuff"
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end
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end
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MyType{"foo" => "bar"}
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# The above is equivalent to
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tmp = MyType.new
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tmp["foo"] = "bar"
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tmp
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# Ranges
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1..10 #=> Range(Int32, Int32)
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Range.new(1, 10).class #=> Range(Int32, Int32)
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# Can be inclusive or exclusive
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(3..5).to_a #=> [3, 4, 5]
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(3...5).to_a #=> [3, 4]
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# Check whether range includes the given value or not
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(1..8).includes? 2 #=> true
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# Tuples are a fixed-size, immutable, stack-allocated sequence of values of
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# possibly different types.
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{1, "hello", 'x'}.class #=> Tuple(Int32, String, Char)
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# Access tuple's value by its index
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tuple = {:key1, :key2}
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tuple[1] #=> :key2
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tuple[2] #=> Error: index out of bounds for Tuple(Symbol, Symbol) (2 not in -2..1)
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# Can be expanded into multiple variables
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a, b, c = {:a, 'b', "c"}
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a #=> :a
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b #=> 'b'
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c #=> "c"
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# Procs represent a function pointer with an optional context (the closure data)
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# It is typically created with a proc literal
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proc = ->(x : Int32) { x.to_s }
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proc.class # Proc(Int32, String)
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# Or using the new method
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Proc(Int32, String).new { |x| x.to_s }
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# Invoke proc with call method
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proc.call 10 #=> "10"
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# Control statements
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if true
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"if statement"
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elsif false
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"else-if, optional"
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else
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"else, also optional"
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end
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puts "if as a suffix" if true
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# If as an expression
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a = if 2 > 1
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3
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else
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4
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end
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a #=> 3
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# Ternary if
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a = 1 > 2 ? 3 : 4 #=> 4
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# Case statement
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cmd = "move"
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action = case cmd
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when "create"
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"Creating..."
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when "copy"
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"Copying..."
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when "move"
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"Moving..."
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when "delete"
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"Deleting..."
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end
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action #=> "Moving..."
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# Loops
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index = 0
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while index <= 3
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puts "Index: #{index}"
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index += 1
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end
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# Index: 0
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# Index: 1
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# Index: 2
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# Index: 3
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index = 0
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until index > 3
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puts "Index: #{index}"
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index += 1
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end
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# Index: 0
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# Index: 1
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# Index: 2
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# Index: 3
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# But the preferable way is to use each
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(1..3).each do |index|
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puts "Index: #{index}"
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end
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# Index: 1
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# Index: 2
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# Index: 3
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# Variable's type depends on the type of the expression
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# in control statements
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if a < 3
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a = "hello"
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else
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a = true
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end
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typeof(a) #=> (Bool | String)
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if a && b
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# here both a and b are guaranteed not to be Nil
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end
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if a.is_a? String
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a.class #=> String
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end
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# Functions
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def double(x)
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x * 2
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end
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# Functions (and all blocks) implicitly return the value of the last statement
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double(2) #=> 4
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# Parentheses are optional where the call is unambiguous
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double 3 #=> 6
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double double 3 #=> 12
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def sum(x, y)
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x + y
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end
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# Method arguments are separated by a comma
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sum 3, 4 #=> 7
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sum sum(3, 4), 5 #=> 12
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# yield
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# All methods have an implicit, optional block parameter
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# it can be called with the 'yield' keyword
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def surround
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puts '{'
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yield
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puts '}'
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end
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surround { puts "hello world" }
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# {
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# hello world
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# }
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# You can pass a block to a function
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# "&" marks a reference to a passed block
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def guests(&block)
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block.call "some_argument"
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end
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# You can pass a list of arguments, which will be converted into an array
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# That's what splat operator ("*") is for
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def guests(*array)
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array.each { |guest| puts guest }
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end
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# If a method returns an array, you can use destructuring assignment
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def foods
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["pancake", "sandwich", "quesadilla"]
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end
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breakfast, lunch, dinner = foods
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breakfast #=> "pancake"
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dinner #=> "quesadilla"
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# By convention, all methods that return booleans end with a question mark
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5.even? # false
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5.odd? # true
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# Also by convention, if a method ends with an exclamation mark, it does
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# something destructive like mutate the receiver.
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# Some methods have a ! version to make a change, and
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# a non-! version to just return a new changed version
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fruits = ["grapes", "apples", "bananas"]
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fruits.sort #=> ["apples", "bananas", "grapes"]
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fruits #=> ["grapes", "apples", "bananas"]
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fruits.sort! #=> ["apples", "bananas", "grapes"]
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fruits #=> ["apples", "bananas", "grapes"]
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# However, some mutating methods do not end in !
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fruits.shift #=> "apples"
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fruits #=> ["bananas", "grapes"]
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# Define a class with the class keyword
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class Human
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# A class variable. It is shared by all instances of this class.
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@@species = "H. sapiens"
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# An instance variable. Type of name is String
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@name : String
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# Basic initializer
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# Assign the argument to the "name" instance variable for the instance
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# If no age given, we will fall back to the default in the arguments list.
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def initialize(@name, @age = 0)
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end
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# Basic setter method
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def name=(name)
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@name = name
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end
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# Basic getter method
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def name
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@name
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end
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# The above functionality can be encapsulated using the propery method as follows
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property :name
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# Getter/setter methods can also be created individually like this
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getter :name
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setter :name
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# A class method uses self to distinguish from instance methods.
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# It can only be called on the class, not an instance.
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def self.say(msg)
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puts msg
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end
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def species
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@@species
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end
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end
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# Instantiate a class
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jim = Human.new("Jim Halpert")
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dwight = Human.new("Dwight K. Schrute")
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# Let's call a couple of methods
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jim.species #=> "H. sapiens"
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jim.name #=> "Jim Halpert"
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jim.name = "Jim Halpert II" #=> "Jim Halpert II"
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jim.name #=> "Jim Halpert II"
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dwight.species #=> "H. sapiens"
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dwight.name #=> "Dwight K. Schrute"
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# Call the class method
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Human.say("Hi") #=> print Hi and returns nil
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# Variables that start with @ have instance scope
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class TestClass
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@var = "I'm an instance var"
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end
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# Variables that start with @@ have class scope
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class TestClass
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@@var = "I'm a class var"
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end
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# Variables that start with a capital letter are constants
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Var = "I'm a constant"
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Var = "can't be updated" # Error: already initialized constant Var
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# Class is also an object in Crystal. So a class can have instance variables.
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# Class variable is shared among the class and all of its descendants.
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# base class
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class Human
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@@foo = 0
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def self.foo
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@@foo
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end
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def self.foo=(value)
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@@foo = value
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end
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end
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# derived class
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class Worker < Human
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end
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Human.foo #=> 0
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Worker.foo #=> 0
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Human.foo = 2 #=> 2
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Worker.foo #=> 0
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Worker.foo = 3 #=> 3
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Human.foo #=> 2
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Worker.foo #=> 3
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module ModuleExample
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def foo
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"foo"
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end
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end
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# Including modules binds their methods to the class instances
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# Extending modules binds their methods to the class itself
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class Person
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include ModuleExample
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end
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class Book
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extend ModuleExample
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end
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Person.foo # => undefined method 'foo' for Person:Class
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Person.new.foo # => 'foo'
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Book.foo # => 'foo'
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Book.new.foo # => undefined method 'foo' for Book
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# Exception handling
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# Define new exception
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class MyException < Exception
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end
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# Define another exception
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class MyAnotherException < Exception; end
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ex = begin
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raise MyException.new
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rescue ex1 : IndexError
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"ex1"
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rescue ex2 : MyException | MyAnotherException
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"ex2"
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rescue ex3 : Exception
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"ex3"
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rescue ex4 # catch any kind of exception
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"ex4"
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end
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ex #=> "ex2"
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```
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## Additional resources
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- [Official Documentation](https://crystal-lang.org/)
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