Current Path : /usr/local/share/ri/1.8/system/URI/MailTo/ |
FreeBSD hs32.drive.ne.jp 9.1-RELEASE FreeBSD 9.1-RELEASE #1: Wed Jan 14 12:18:08 JST 2015 root@hs32.drive.ne.jp:/sys/amd64/compile/hs32 amd64 |
Current File : //usr/local/share/ri/1.8/system/URI/MailTo/build-c.yaml |
--- !ruby/object:RI::MethodDescription aliases: [] block_params: comment: - !ruby/struct:SM::Flow::H level: 2 text: Description - !ruby/struct:SM::Flow::P body: Creates a new URI::MailTo object from components, with syntax checking. - !ruby/struct:SM::Flow::P body: Components can be provided as an Array or Hash. If an Array is used, the components must be supplied as [to, headers]. - !ruby/struct:SM::Flow::P body: If a Hash is used, the keys are the component names preceded by colons. - !ruby/struct:SM::Flow::P body: The headers can be supplied as a pre-encoded string, such as "subject=subscribe&cc=address", or as an Array of Arrays like [['subject', 'subscribe'], ['cc', 'address']] - !ruby/struct:SM::Flow::P body: "Examples:" - !ruby/struct:SM::Flow::VERB body: " require 'uri'\n\n m1 = URI::MailTo.build(['joe@example.com', 'subject=Ruby'])\n puts m1.to_s -> mailto:joe@example.com?subject=Ruby\n\n m2 = URI::MailTo.build(['john@example.com', [['Subject', 'Ruby'], ['Cc', 'jack@example.com']]])\n puts m2.to_s -> mailto:john@example.com?Subject=Ruby&Cc=jack@example.com\n\n m3 = URI::MailTo.build({:to => 'listman@example.com', :headers => [['subject', 'subscribe']]})\n puts m3.to_s -> mailto:listman@example.com?subject=subscribe\n" full_name: URI::MailTo::build is_singleton: true name: build params: (args) visibility: public