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Home/ Questions/Q 1054877
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 16, 20262026-05-16T17:28:32+00:00 2026-05-16T17:28:32+00:00

Ruby’s File.open takes modes and options as arguments. Where do I find a complete

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Ruby’s File.open takes modes and options as arguments. Where do I find a complete list of modes and options?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-16T17:28:32+00:00Added an answer on May 16, 2026 at 5:28 pm

    In Ruby IO module documentation, I suppose.

    Mode |  Meaning
    -----+--------------------------------------------------------
    "r"  |  Read-only, starts at beginning of file  (default mode).
    -----+--------------------------------------------------------
    "r+" |  Read-write, starts at beginning of file.
    -----+--------------------------------------------------------
    "w"  |  Write-only, truncates existing file
         |  to zero length or creates a new file for writing.
    -----+--------------------------------------------------------
    "w+" |  Read-write, truncates existing file to zero length
         |  or creates a new file for reading and writing.
    -----+--------------------------------------------------------
    "a"  |  Write-only, starts at end of file if file exists,
         |  otherwise creates a new file for writing.
    -----+--------------------------------------------------------
    "a+" |  Read-write, starts at end of file if file exists,
         |  otherwise creates a new file for reading and
         |  writing.
    -----+--------------------------------------------------------
    "b"  |  Binary file mode (may appear with
         |  any of the key letters listed above).
         |  Suppresses EOL <-> CRLF conversion on Windows. And
         |  sets external encoding to ASCII-8BIT unless explicitly
         |  specified.
    -----+--------------------------------------------------------
    "t"  |  Text file mode (may appear with
         |  any of the key letters listed above except "b").
    
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