sketchucation logo sketchucation
    • Login
    ℹ️ Licensed Extensions | FredoBatch, ElevationProfile, FredoSketch, LayOps, MatSim and Pic2Shape will require license from Sept 1st More Info

    Create file with accent in the path

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Developers' Forum
    23 Posts 3 Posters 923 Views 3 Watching
    Loading More Posts
    • Oldest to Newest
    • Newest to Oldest
    • Most Votes
    Reply
    • Reply as topic
    Log in to reply
    This topic has been deleted. Only users with topic management privileges can see it.
    • IltisI Offline
      Iltis
      last edited by

      File.exist? doesn't work, for same reasons... 😞

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • tt_suT Offline
        tt_su
        last edited by

        @iltis said:

        File.exist? doesn't work, for same reasons... 😞

        Doesn't work, as in it raises an error? Then you can rescue from that error and provide your message to the user.

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • IltisI Offline
          Iltis
          last edited by

          Mhhh, I've got a problem with my test :

          UI.messagebox(filepath)
          		  # Open a file for writing
          		  File.open(filepath, "w"){ |file|
          			selection = Sketchup.active_model.selection
          			 ...{
                                      ...{
          
          				# Write the coordinates to the file.
          				file.puts("#{u};#{v}")
          			  }
          			}
          		  }
          		 UI.messagebox("FileTest")
          		 if FileTest.exists?(filepath)
          			UI.messagebox("The file is there")
          		 else
          			UI.messagebox("The file is not there")
          		 end
          

          The first messagebox give me the path : "C:\Users\Tarzan\Documents\aiR-C2\MiniCut2d\Bibliothèque\test.txt"
          But no more messagebox after the "File.open"... do you know why?
          But if I understand this topic (http://sketchucation.com/forums/viewtopic.php?t=20289), the ".exists?" is not the solution.

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • tt_suT Offline
            tt_su
            last edited by

            In the Ruby Console do you see error messages? What I meant was to catch there errors, using begin, rescue.

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • IltisI Offline
              Iltis
              last edited by

              OK, I see the error in the Ruby Console (thank you for the tip) :

              Error: #<Errno::ENOENT: No such file or directory - C:/Users/Tarzan/Documents/aiR-C2/MiniCut2d/Bibliothèque/test.f2xy>
              ...

              I will try to catch it.

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • IltisI Offline
                Iltis
                last edited by

                OK, this code works on SU8 :

                		  begin
                		  File.open(filepath, "w"){ |file|
                			...
                		  }
                		 	UI.messagebox("The file is here ;" + filepath)
                		rescue
                		 	UI.messagebox("Error, the file was not created. Be careful if you are using an older version of SketchUp, the full file path must not contain special or accented characters. The full file path you requested is " + filepath)
                		 end
                

                The "è" looks "è" in the messagebox, but the user know how to fix the problem.

                I try to use it in SketchUp 2014, but I've got an error 😞

                Erreur de chargement du fichier faces2xy.rb
                Error; #<SyntaxError; C;/Users/Tarzan/AppData/Roaming/SketchUp/SketchUp 2014/SketchUp/Plugins/faces2xy.rb;18; syntax error, unexpected ',', expecting ')'
                		  filepath = UI.savepanel ("Export selected faces",nil,"*.f2xy")
                C;/Users/Tarzan/AppData/Roaming/SketchUp/SketchUp 2014/SketchUp/Plugins/faces2xy.rb;18; Can't assign to nil
                		  filepath = UI.savepanel ("Export selected faces",nil,"*.f2xy")
                C;/Users/Tarzan/AppData/Roaming/SketchUp/SketchUp 2014/SketchUp/Plugins/faces2xy.rb;18; syntax error, unexpected ')', expecting ;; or '[' or '.'
                		  filepath = UI.savepanel ("Export selected faces",nil,"*.f2xy")
                
                

                Do you know how to fix this (in all SU versions...)?
                Thanks,
                Renaud

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • tt_suT Offline
                  tt_su
                  last edited by

                  @iltis said:

                  The "è" looks "è" in the messagebox, but the user know how to fix the problem.

                  That's odd - if the string is UTF-8 encoded then it should look fine in SketchUp regardless.
                  Have you saved your RB files as UTF-8 without BOM?

                  @iltis said:

                  I try to use it in SketchUp 2014, but I've got an error 😞

                  I'm not sure, but I think it could be that space you have between the method name and the parentheses: filepath = UI.savepanel ("Export selected faces",nil,"*.f2xy")

                  But the error could be cascading some elsewhere... hard to tell without knowing the source code.

                  Btw, it's recommended not to catch all exceptions, but only the ones you expect.
                  http://www.skorks.com/2009/09/ruby-exceptions-and-exception-handling/

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • IltisI Offline
                    Iltis
                    last edited by

                    Bingo! 2/2. It works fine now. Is "UTF-8 without BOM" the best to use? (Default value?)
                    Thank you for the quick answer!
                    I will see how to catch only the file exception.

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • IltisI Offline
                      Iltis
                      last edited by

                      Mhh, the error is

                      Error; #<Errno;;ENOENT; No such file or directory - C;/Users/Tarzan/Documents/aiR-C2/MiniCut2d/Bibliothèque/test.f2xy>
                      

                      I don't understand how to only catch this type of exception... (not in the "Ruby Exception Hierarchy"). I'll see this later.

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • tt_suT Offline
                        tt_su
                        last edited by

                        @iltis said:

                        Bingo! 2/2. It works fine now. Is "UTF-8 without BOM" the best to use?

                        I recommend that because without the BOM you can load the file in Ruby 1.8. With the BOM Ruby 1.8 will not load it.

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • tt_suT Offline
                          tt_su
                          last edited by

                          @iltis said:

                          Mhh, the error is

                          Error; #<Errno;;ENOENT; No such file or directory - C;/Users/Tarzan/Documents/aiR-C2/MiniCut2d/Bibliothèque/test.f2xy>
                          

                          I don't understand how to only catch this type of exception... (not in the "Ruby Exception Hierarchy"). I'll see this later.

                          You should be able to catch Errno::ENOENT - it's a class inherited form StandardError.

                          Errno::ENOENT.ancestors [Errno::ENOENT, SystemCallError, StandardError, Exception, Object, PP::ObjectMixin, JSON::Ext::Generator::GeneratorMethods::Object, Kernel, BasicObject]

                          Though, it might be system dependant... Maybe catching SystemCallError is a good one to catch for these types of errors.

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • IltisI Offline
                            Iltis
                            last edited by

                            OK, thank you.

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • Dan RathbunD Offline
                              Dan Rathbun
                              last edited by

                              Like this:

                                begin
                                  File.open(filepath, "w"){ |file|
                                    #...
                                  }
                                  UI.messagebox("The file is here ;" + filepath)
                                rescue SystemCallError => e
                                  if e.message =~ /(No such file or directory)/
                                    UI.messagebox("Error, the file was not created. Be careful if you are using an older version of SketchUp, the full file path must not contain special or accented characters. The full file path you requested is " + filepath)
                                  else
                                    fail() #re-raise the last exception
                                  end
                                end
                              

                              I'm not here much anymore.

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • IltisI Offline
                                Iltis
                                last edited by

                                Nice, thank you Dan!

                                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • tt_suT Offline
                                  tt_su
                                  last edited by

                                  @dan rathbun said:

                                  fail() #re-raise the last exception

                                  Never seen that method used before. Is that different from just calling raise?

                                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • Dan RathbunD Offline
                                    Dan Rathbun
                                    last edited by

                                    @tt_su said:

                                    @dan rathbun said:

                                    fail() #re-raise the last exception

                                    Never seen that method used before. Is that different from just calling raise?

                                    raise() is an alias for fail()
                                    See the doc on the Kernel module:
                                    http://www.ruby-doc.org/core-1.8.6/Kernel.html#method-i-fail

                                    The best practices guides I have read, suggest that fail be used instead of raise, for readability, I suppose. But I really did not understand the logic in the guide. (I think it was something like "raise" has more meanings as a verb than "fail" ?)

                                    I'm not here much anymore.

                                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • 1
                                    • 2
                                    • 1 / 2
                                    • First post
                                      Last post
                                    Buy SketchPlus
                                    Buy SUbD
                                    Buy WrapR
                                    Buy eBook
                                    Buy Modelur
                                    Buy Vertex Tools
                                    Buy SketchCuisine
                                    Buy FormFonts

                                    Advertisement