thelo.g thelo wrote in post #1018739:
> I tried but it doesn't work, is it possible that the mistake has a ling
> with \n at the end of r? because when I do:
> puts '"' + r + '"'
>
> I get
> "Archives-2011-08-26-09-56-00-UTC.xml
> "

It's not only possible, that is exactly what is at the end of r.   When 
you are having such a problem, it is easier to see what the string 
actually contains by doing one of the following:

1) puts "-->#{some_var}<---"


2) p r

which is the same as:

puts r.inspect

Here is an example:

str = "hello
world"

p str

--output:--
"hello\nworld"


And of course the newline makes a difference in the file name.  You can 
test that yourself:

some_file = "html.htm"

File.open(some_file) do |f|
  puts f.read
end

Once you get that to work with a file on your file system, try adding a 
\n to the end.

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