=Ruby Units Version: 0.2.3 Kevin C. Olbrich, Ph.D. http://www.sciwerks.com Project page: http://rubyforge.org/projects/ruby-units ==Introduction Many technical applications make use of specialized calculations at some point. Frequently, these calculations require unit conversions to ensure accurate results. Needless to say, this is a pain to properly keep track of, and is prone to numerous errors. ==Solution The 'Ruby units' gem is designed so simplify the handling of units for scientific calculations. The units of each quantity are specified when a Unit object is created and the Unit class will handle all subsequent conversions and manipulations to ensure an accurate result. ==Installation: This package may be installed using: gem install ruby-units ==Usage: unit = Unit.new("1") # constant only unit = Unit.new("mm") # unit only (defaults to a value of 1) unit = Unit.new("1 mm") # create a simple unit unit = Unit.new("1 mm/s") # a compound unit unit = Unit.new("1 mm s^-1") # in exponent notation unit = Unit.new("1 kg*m^2/s^2") # complex unit unit = Unit.new("1 kg m^2 s^-2") # complex unit unit = Unit("1 mm") # shorthand unit = "1 mm".to_unit # convert string object unit = object.to_unit # convert any object using object.to_s unit = U'1 mm' unit = u'1 mm' unit = '1 mm'.unit unit = '1 mm'.u ==Rules: 1. only 1 quantity per unit (with 2 exceptions... 6'5" and '8 lbs 8 oz') 2. use SI notation when possible 3. avoid using spaces in unit names ==Unit compatability: Many methods require that the units of two operands are compatible. Compatible units are those that can be easily converted into each other, such as 'meters' and 'feet'. unit1 =~ unit2 #=> true if units are compatible ==Unit Math: Method:: Comment Unit#+():: Add. only works if units are compatible Unit#-():: Subtract. only works if units are compatible Unit#*():: Multiply. Unit#/():: Divide. Unit#**():: Exponentiate. Exponent must be an integer, can be positive, negative, or zero Unit#inverse:: Returns 1/unit Unit#abs:: Returns absolute value of the unit quantity. Strips off the units Unit#ceil:: rounds quantity to next highest integer Unit#floor:: rounds quantity down to next lower integer Unit#round:: rounds quantity to nearest integer Unit#to_int:: returns the quantity as an integer Unit will coerce other objects into a Unit if used in a formula. This means that .. Unit("1 mm") + "2 mm" == Unit("3 mm") This will work as expected so long as you start the formula with a Unit object. ==Conversions & comparisons Units can be converted to other units in a couple of ways. unit1 = unit >> "ft" # => convert to 'feet' unit >>= "ft" # => convert and overwrite original object unit3 = unit1 + unit2 # => resulting object will have the units of unit1 unit3 = unit1 - unit2 # => resulting object will have the units of unit1 unit1 <=> unit2 # => does comparison on quantities in base units, throws an exception if not compatible unit1 === unit2 # => true if units and quantity are the same, even if 'equivalent' by <=> unit.to('ft') # convert ==Text Output Units will display themselves nicely based on the preferred abbreviation for the units and prefixes. Since Unit implements a Unit#to_s, all that is needed in most cases is: "#{Unit.new('1 mm')}" #=> "1 mm" The to_s also accepts some options. Unit.new('1.5 mm').to_s("%0.2f") # => "1.50 mm". Enter any valid format string. Also accepts strftime format U('1.5 mm').to_s("in") # => converts to inches before printing U("2 m").to_s(:ft) #=> returns 6'7" U("100 kg").to_s(:lbs) #=> returns 220 lbs, 7 oz ==Time Helpers Time, Date, and DateTime objects can have time units added or subtracted. Time.now + "10 min".u Several helpers have also been defined. 'min'.since('9/18/06 3:00pm') 'min'.before('9/18/08 3:00pm') 'days'.until('1/1/07') '5 min'.from(Time.now) '5 min'.from_now '5 min'.before_now '5 min'.before(Time.now) '10 min'.ago ==Ranges [U('0 h')..U('10 h')].each {|x| p x} works so long as the starting point has an integer scalar ==Math functions All Trig math functions (sin, cos, sinh, ...) can take a unit as their parameter. It will be converted to radians and then used if possible.