A ruby library to read and write Java properties files.
Install via Rubygems
$ gem install java-properties
... or add to your Gemfile
gem "java-properties"
You can load a valid Java properties file from the file system using a path:
properties = JavaProperties.load("path/to/my.properties")
properties[:foo] # => "bar"
If have already the content of the properties file at hand than parse the content as:
properties = JavaProperties.parse("foo=bar")
properties[:foo] # => "bar"
You can write any Hash-like structure as a properties file:
hash = {:foo => "bar"}
JavaProperties.write(hash, "path/to/my.properties")
Or if you want to omit the file you can receive the content directly:
hash = {:foo => "bar"}
JavaProperties.generate(hash) # => "foo=bar"
As Java properties files normally hold UTF-8 chars in their escaped representation this tool tries to convert them:
"ה" <=> "\u05d4"
"𪀯" <=> "\ud868\udc2f"
The tool also escaped every '=', ' ' and ':' in the name part of a property line:
JavaProperties.generate({"i : like=strange" => "bar"})
# => "i\ \:\ like\=strange=bar"
In Java properties files a string can be multi line but line breaks have to be escaped.
Assume the following input:
my=This is a multi \
line content with only \n one line break
The parses would read:
{:my => "This is a multi line content which only \n one line break"}
In the opposite direction line breaks will be correctly escaped but the generator will never use multi line values.
- Fork it!
- Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b my-new-feature
) - Commit your changes (
git commit -am 'Add some feature'
) - Push to the branch (
git push origin my-new-feature
) - Create new Pull Request
Jonas Thiel (@jonasthiel)
For more information about the properties file format have a look at the Java Plattform documenation.
This gem is released under the MIT License. See the LICENSE file for further details.