You are still reading "Foo\n\nBar". However, puts interprets the special characters.
You can use String#inspect:
puts content.inspect # => "Foo\n\nBar"
This is not safe. It will put it in quotes. It will also do the wrong thing if the object is not a String object, it will show the class. The format of Object.inspect should not be relied upon to be anything but human readable. inspect's behavior can be overridden.
@sawa For this exact piece of code it is probably safe for the current version of Ruby. As a general purpose technique for escaping special characters it is not. You're handing the OP a gun without explaining the safety rules.
@Schwern, so your argument for downvoting is that if you pass it something, which you shouldn't pass, you will get a strange result and that if someone arbitrary monkey patches the core string class it might not work?
@ndn My argument is the OP is going to use this technique for escaping special characters on a string-like that doesn't come from a file and not understand why it doesn't work.
@sawa That's A) very lazy to limit the answer to one that only works for the exact details of the question, B) might break in a future version and C) should be made extremely clear to the OP who is obviously not experienced to know that.
@ndn Yes, it's a thing that acts like a string and it could be returned by a method that returns a "string". That's the whole point of duck typing. Why tempt fate with inspect, and get the wrong format because of the quotes, when thing.to_s.gsub works without caveats?
@Schwern, by that logic I shouldn't use any of the Array's method in my answers because someone might want to use them for something that acts like an array, but implements some methods to do completely different things. And no, URI::HTTP is not intended to be a sort of string, it can just be visualized as a string...
@ndn No, those overrides would be a violation of the Array interface and considered bugs. You're violating Object.inspect's interface by using it outside its defined behavior. It only guarantees a "human readable representation". The docs encourage that "user defined classes should override this method to provide a better representation of obj" String.inspect overrides the default behavior, it is normally "object’s class name, an encoding of the object id, and a list of the instance variables and their values".
@Schwern, in what way is that an argument? Lets say you have a hierarchy with Animal, Dog < Animal, Cat < Animal. And Animals have make_sound method, which in Dog is implemented as "bark". A person is asking me right now how do I make a dog bark?. I answer with dog.make_sound. And you say - no!, that is a terrible idea, because the default implementation of make_sound is "grrrr" and a Cat might implement an entirely different thing to! WHAT?
I think part of the disagreement here is I've interpreted the question as "how do I escape newlines" but it might also be "how do I emulate the behavior of irb". If it's the latter, this answer is correct.
There is a difference between the default implementation and the documented implementation.
If the documentation says "Animal.make_sound returns the sound the animal would plausibly make" then either "grr" or "bark" is fine.
And if it said that, assuming that Dog.make_sound will always say grrr because it says grrr right now is wrong.
And a duck type would consist of all the methods you indent to use. By your logic, what if my subclass of string implements inspect the way string does, but to_s returns 55? Then your version doesn't work
"Returns a printable version of str, surrounded by quote marks, with special characters escaped." -> the documentation says it... Also the question wasn't asking "how do I escape this", it was asking "how do I see this for what it truely is/what it is inside", inspect is just 100% perfect