This is a Ruby tree! It shows every object from the Ruby Programming Language in a tree format.
# DateTime.iso8601 (from ruby core) --- DateTime.iso8601(string='-4712-01-01T00:00:00+00:00'[, start=Date::ITALY], limit: 128) -> datetime --- Creates a new DateTime object by parsing from a string according to some typical ISO 8601 formats. DateTime.iso8601('2001-02-03T04:05:06+07:00') #=> #<DateTime: 2001-02-03T04:05:06+07:00 ...> DateTime.iso8601('20010203T040506+0700') #=> #<DateTime: 2001-02-03T04:05:06+07:00 ...> DateTime.iso8601('2001-W05-6T04:05:06+07:00') #=> #<DateTime: 2001-02-03T04:05:06+07:00 ...> Raise an ArgumentError when the string length is longer than *limit*. You can stop this check by passing `limit: nil`, but note that it may take a long time to parse. (from ruby core) --- dt.iso8601([n=0]) -> string dt.xmlschema([n=0]) -> string --- This method is equivalent to strftime('%FT%T%:z'). The optional argument `n` is the number of digits for fractional seconds. DateTime.parse('2001-02-03T04:05:06.123456789+07:00').iso8601(9) #=> "2001-02-03T04:05:06.123456789+07:00"
This is MURDOC! A Ruby documentation browser inspired by Smalltalk-80. It allows you to learn about Ruby by browsing through its class hierarchies, and see any of its methods.