pry--pry/lib/pry.rb

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# (C) John Mair (banisterfiend) 2011
# MIT License
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#
require 'pp'
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require 'pry/helpers/base_helpers'
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require 'pry/hooks'
class Pry
# The default hooks - display messages when beginning and ending Pry sessions.
DEFAULT_HOOKS = Pry::Hooks.new.add_hook(:before_session, :default) do |out, target, _pry_|
next if _pry_.quiet?
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_pry_.run_command("whereami --quiet", "", target)
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end
# The default print
DEFAULT_PRINT = proc do |output, value|
stringified = begin
value.pretty_inspect
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rescue RescuableException
nil
end
unless String === stringified
# Read the class name off of the singleton class to provide a default inspect.
klass = (class << value; self; end).ancestors.first
stringified = "#<#{klass}:0x#{value.__id__.to_s(16)}>"
end
nonce = rand(0x100000000).to_s(16) # whatever
colorized = Helpers::BaseHelpers.colorize_code(stringified.gsub(/#</, "%<#{nonce}"))
# avoid colour-leak from CodeRay and any of the users' previous output
colorized = colorized.sub(/(\n*)$/, "\e[0m\\1") if Pry.color
Helpers::BaseHelpers.stagger_output("=> #{colorized.gsub(/%<(.*?)#{nonce}/, '#<\1')}", output)
end
# may be convenient when working with enormous objects and
# pretty_print is too slow
SIMPLE_PRINT = proc do |output, value|
begin
output.puts "=> #{value.inspect}"
rescue RescuableException
output.puts "=> unknown"
end
end
# useful when playing with truly enormous objects
CLIPPED_PRINT = proc do |output, value|
output.puts "=> #{Pry.view_clip(value)}"
end
# Will only show the first line of the backtrace
DEFAULT_EXCEPTION_HANDLER = proc do |output, exception, _|
output.puts "#{exception.class}: #{exception.message}"
output.puts "from #{exception.backtrace.first}"
end
# Don't catch these exceptions
DEFAULT_EXCEPTION_WHITELIST = [SystemExit, SignalException]
# The default prompt; includes the target and nesting level
DEFAULT_PROMPT = [
proc { |target_self, nest_level, pry|
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"[#{pry.input_array.size}] pry(#{Pry.view_clip(target_self)})#{":#{nest_level}" unless nest_level.zero?}> "
},
proc { |target_self, nest_level, pry|
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"[#{pry.input_array.size}] pry(#{Pry.view_clip(target_self)})#{":#{nest_level}" unless nest_level.zero?}* "
}
]
# A simple prompt - doesn't display target or nesting level
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SIMPLE_PROMPT = [proc { ">> " }, proc { " | " }]
SHELL_PROMPT = [
proc { |target_self, _, _| "pry #{Pry.view_clip(target_self)}:#{Dir.pwd} $ " },
proc { |target_self, _, _| "pry #{Pry.view_clip(target_self)}:#{Dir.pwd} * " }
]
# A prompt that includes the full object path as well as
# input/output (_in_ and _out_) information. Good for navigation.
NAV_PROMPT = [
proc do |conf|
tree = conf.binding_stack.map { |b| Pry.view_clip(b.eval("self")) }.join " / "
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"[#{conf.expr_number}] (pry) #{tree}: #{conf.nesting_level}> "
end,
proc do |conf|
tree = conf.binding_stack.map { |b| Pry.view_clip(b.eval("self")) }.join " / "
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"[#{conf.expr_number}] (pry) #{tree}: #{conf.nesting_level}* "
end,
]
# Deal with the ^D key being pressed, different behaviour in
# different cases:
# 1) In an expression - behave like `!` command (clear input buffer)
# 2) At top-level session - behave like `exit command (break out of repl loop)
# 3) In a nested session - behave like `cd ..` (pop a binding)
DEFAULT_CONTROL_D_HANDLER = proc do |eval_string, _pry_|
if !eval_string.empty?
Change behavior of `cd -` command Since banister begged me to do that... completely rewrite `cd -` command (implemetation is much simpler now). This commit brings such changes: * completely rewrite behavior of `cd -` command; * implement ScratchPad aka Pad for unit testing purposes (by banister); * use Pad riches in the unit tests for `cd -` command; * remove verbose and clunky unit tests; This commit brings new meaning to the `cd -` command. The main difference is that the new command saves entire binding stack, not just the last binding. Let me show you an example of the variance between these two implemetations: * Old `cd -` implementation saves *only* last binding. With our next `cd -` invocation our interjacent results are lost: [1] pry(main)> cd 1/2/3/../4 [2] pry(4):3> cd - [3] pry(main)> cd - [4] pry(4):1> nesting Nesting status: -- 0. main (Pry top level) 1. 4 Also, there are a few bugs in old `cd -` command: * you type `cd :foo`, `cd 1/2/3` and `cd -`. The last command relocates you to the scope of `3` (leaves you where you was), when `:foo` is expected; * you type `cd :foo`, `cd 1/2/3/../4`, `cd -`. The last command relocates you to the scope of `3`, when `:foo` is expected. * New and shiny `cd -` is devoid of those shortcomings: [1] pry(main)> cd 1/2/3/../4 [2] pry(4):3> cd - [3] pry(main)> cd - [4] pry(4):3> nesting Nesting status: -- 0. main (Pry top level) 1. 1 2. 2 3. 4 As I said before, this solution is *much* simpler and less error-prone. Signed-off-by: Kyrylo Silin <kyrylosilin@gmail.com>
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# Clear input buffer.
eval_string.replace("")
elsif _pry_.binding_stack.one?
Change behavior of `cd -` command Since banister begged me to do that... completely rewrite `cd -` command (implemetation is much simpler now). This commit brings such changes: * completely rewrite behavior of `cd -` command; * implement ScratchPad aka Pad for unit testing purposes (by banister); * use Pad riches in the unit tests for `cd -` command; * remove verbose and clunky unit tests; This commit brings new meaning to the `cd -` command. The main difference is that the new command saves entire binding stack, not just the last binding. Let me show you an example of the variance between these two implemetations: * Old `cd -` implementation saves *only* last binding. With our next `cd -` invocation our interjacent results are lost: [1] pry(main)> cd 1/2/3/../4 [2] pry(4):3> cd - [3] pry(main)> cd - [4] pry(4):1> nesting Nesting status: -- 0. main (Pry top level) 1. 4 Also, there are a few bugs in old `cd -` command: * you type `cd :foo`, `cd 1/2/3` and `cd -`. The last command relocates you to the scope of `3` (leaves you where you was), when `:foo` is expected; * you type `cd :foo`, `cd 1/2/3/../4`, `cd -`. The last command relocates you to the scope of `3`, when `:foo` is expected. * New and shiny `cd -` is devoid of those shortcomings: [1] pry(main)> cd 1/2/3/../4 [2] pry(4):3> cd - [3] pry(main)> cd - [4] pry(4):3> nesting Nesting status: -- 0. main (Pry top level) 1. 1 2. 2 3. 4 As I said before, this solution is *much* simpler and less error-prone. Signed-off-by: Kyrylo Silin <kyrylosilin@gmail.com>
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# ^D at top-level breaks out of a REPL loop.
_pry_.binding_stack.clear
throw(:breakout)
else
Change behavior of `cd -` command Since banister begged me to do that... completely rewrite `cd -` command (implemetation is much simpler now). This commit brings such changes: * completely rewrite behavior of `cd -` command; * implement ScratchPad aka Pad for unit testing purposes (by banister); * use Pad riches in the unit tests for `cd -` command; * remove verbose and clunky unit tests; This commit brings new meaning to the `cd -` command. The main difference is that the new command saves entire binding stack, not just the last binding. Let me show you an example of the variance between these two implemetations: * Old `cd -` implementation saves *only* last binding. With our next `cd -` invocation our interjacent results are lost: [1] pry(main)> cd 1/2/3/../4 [2] pry(4):3> cd - [3] pry(main)> cd - [4] pry(4):1> nesting Nesting status: -- 0. main (Pry top level) 1. 4 Also, there are a few bugs in old `cd -` command: * you type `cd :foo`, `cd 1/2/3` and `cd -`. The last command relocates you to the scope of `3` (leaves you where you was), when `:foo` is expected; * you type `cd :foo`, `cd 1/2/3/../4`, `cd -`. The last command relocates you to the scope of `3`, when `:foo` is expected. * New and shiny `cd -` is devoid of those shortcomings: [1] pry(main)> cd 1/2/3/../4 [2] pry(4):3> cd - [3] pry(main)> cd - [4] pry(4):3> nesting Nesting status: -- 0. main (Pry top level) 1. 1 2. 2 3. 4 As I said before, this solution is *much* simpler and less error-prone. Signed-off-by: Kyrylo Silin <kyrylosilin@gmail.com>
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# Otherwise, saves current binding stack as old stack and pops last
# binding out of binding stack (the old stack still has that binding).
_pry_.command_state["cd"].old_stack = _pry_.binding_stack.dup
_pry_.binding_stack.pop
end
end
DEFAULT_SYSTEM = proc do |output, cmd, _|
if !system(cmd)
output.puts "Error: there was a problem executing system command: #{cmd}"
end
end
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# As a REPL, we often want to catch any unexpected exceptions that may have
# been raised; however we don't want to go overboard and prevent the user
# from exiting Pry when they want to.
module RescuableException
def self.===(exception)
case exception
# Catch when the user hits ^C (Interrupt < SignalException), and assume
# that they just wanted to stop the in-progress command (just like bash etc.)
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when Interrupt
true
# Don't catch signals (particularly not SIGTERM) as these are unlikely to be
# intended for pry itself. We should also make sure that Kernel#exit works.
when *Pry.config.exception_whitelist
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false
# All other exceptions will be caught.
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else
true
end
end
end
# CommandErrors are caught by the REPL loop and displayed to the user. They
# indicate an exceptional condition that's fatal to the current command.
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class CommandError < StandardError; end
class MethodNotFound < CommandError; end
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# indicates obsolete API
class ObsoleteError < StandardError; end
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# This is to keep from breaking under Rails 3.2 for people who are doing that
# IRB = Pry thing.
module ExtendCommandBundle
end
end
if Pry::Helpers::BaseHelpers.mri_18?
begin
require 'ruby18_source_location'
rescue LoadError
end
end
require "method_source"
require 'shellwords'
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require "stringio"
require "coderay"
require "optparse"
require "slop"
require "rbconfig"
begin
require 'readline'
rescue LoadError
warn "You're running a version of ruby with no Readline support"
warn "Please `gem install rb-readline` or recompile ruby --with-readline."
exit!
end
if Pry::Helpers::BaseHelpers.jruby?
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begin
require 'ffi'
rescue LoadError
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warn "Need to `gem install ffi`"
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end
end
if Pry::Helpers::BaseHelpers.windows? && !Pry::Helpers::BaseHelpers.windows_ansi?
begin
require 'win32console'
# The mswin and mingw versions of pry require win32console, so this should
# only fail on jruby (where win32console doesn't work).
# Instead we'll recommend ansicon, which does.
rescue LoadError
warn "For a better pry experience, please use ansicon: http://adoxa.3eeweb.com/ansicon/"
end
end
require "pry/version"
require "pry/rbx_method"
require "pry/rbx_path"
require "pry/code"
require "pry/method"
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require "pry/wrapped_module"
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require "pry/history_array"
require "pry/helpers"
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require "pry/history"
require "pry/command"
require "pry/command_set"
require "pry/commands"
require "pry/custom_completions"
require "pry/completion"
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require "pry/plugins"
require "pry/core_extensions"
require "pry/pry_class"
require "pry/pry_instance"
require "pry/cli"
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require "pry/pager"