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Home/ Questions/Q 8996569
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 15, 20262026-06-15T23:46:19+00:00 2026-06-15T23:46:19+00:00

I’m currently learning Ruby and I can’t seem to wrap around what if /start/../end

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I’m currently learning Ruby and I can’t seem to wrap around what if /start/../end does… Help?

while gets
  print if /start/../end/
end
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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-15T23:46:19+00:00Added an answer on June 15, 2026 at 11:46 pm

    Since you mentioned that you’re new to Ruby, it’s first worth taking note that you’re dealing with Regular Expressions (regex) in the example – anything that is delimited between two forward slashes:

    /start/   # a regular expression literal
    

    Regular Expressions are a powerful way of matching a certain combination of letters from a larger string.

    "To start means to begin." =~ /start/  #=> true, because 'start' is in the string. 
    

    The double dot notation is the flip-flop operator, a controversial construct probably inherited from Perl and not usually recommended to be used because it can lead to confusion.

    It means the following:
    It will collectively evaluate to false until the left hand operand is true. At which point it will collectively evaluate to true. However it will only remain true until the right hand operand evaluates to true – at which point it will again evaluate collectively to false.

    Using your above example therefore:

    while gets
     print if /start/../end/
    end
    
    1. Until ‘start’ is entered in, the entire expression is false, and nothing is printed.
    2. When ‘start’ is input, the entire expression is true, therefore EVERYTHING input after this point will also be printed out. (despite not being ‘start’)
    3. As soon as ‘end’ is input, the entire expression evaluates to false, and nothing from that point on is printed out.
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