Support for the Ruby 2.4 series has ended. See here for reference.
Default number of frames offset
Default number of stack frames
Convenience method for Frame#bottom
# File irb/frame.rb, line 62 def Frame.bottom(n = 0) @backtrace.bottom(n) end
Creates a new stack frame
# File irb/frame.rb, line 27 def initialize @frames = [TOPLEVEL_BINDING] * INIT_STACK_TIMES end
Returns the binding context of the caller from the last frame initialized
# File irb/frame.rb, line 72 def Frame.sender eval "self", @backtrace.top end
Convenience method for Frame#top
# File irb/frame.rb, line 67 def Frame.top(n = 0) @backtrace.top(n) end
Returns the n
number of frames on the call stack from the first frame initialized.
Raises FrameOverflow if there are no frames in the given stack range.
# File irb/frame.rb, line 55 def bottom(n = 0) bind = @frames[n] Fail FrameOverflow unless bind bind end
Returns the n
number of frames on the call stack from the last frame initialized.
Raises FrameUnderflow if there are no frames in the given stack range.
# File irb/frame.rb, line 45 def top(n = 0) bind = @frames[-(n + CALL_STACK_OFFSET)] Fail FrameUnderflow unless bind bind end
Used by Kernel#set_trace_func to register each event in the call stack
# File irb/frame.rb, line 32 def trace_func(event, file, line, id, binding) case event when 'call', 'class' @frames.push binding when 'return', 'end' @frames.pop end end