PRY
- A Reference to the PRY repl.
pry
[--version
] [--exec
] [--no-pager
] [--no-history
] [--no-color
] [-f
] [--no-plugins
] [--installed-plugins
] [--simple-prompt
] [--require
file] [-I
] [--context
] [--help
]
Pry is a powerful alternative to the standard IRB shell for Ruby. It is written from scratch to provide a number of advanced features.
http://pry.github.com/
-v --version
Prints the version of Pry.
-e --exec
Executes argument in context before the session starts.
--no-pager
Disable pager for long output.
--no-history
Disable history loading.
--no-color
Disable syntax highlighting for session.
-f
Prevent loading of ~/.pryrc for session.
--no-plugins
Supress loading of plugins.
--installed-plugins
List installed plugins.
--simple-prompt
Enable simple prompt mode (eg, >>).
-r --require
Require a ruby script at startup.
-I
Add a path to the $LOAD_PATH
-c --context
Start the session in the specified context. Equivalent to context.pry
in a session.
~/.pryrc Personal pry initialization
$ pry
[1] pry(main)>4 + 5
=> 9
[2] pry(main)> def hello_world
[2] pry(main)* puts "Hello, World!"
[2] pry(main)* end
=> nil
[3] pry(main)> hello_world
Hello, World!
=> nil
Prefix any command you want your shell to execute with a period and pry will return the results from your shell.
[1] pry(main)> .date
Fri Nov 11 09:52:07 EST 2011
On the command line enter shell-mode
to incorporate the current working directory into the Pry prompt.
pry(main)> shell-mode
pry main:/Users/john/ruby/projects/pry $ .cd ..
pry main:/Users/john/ruby/projects $ .cd ~
pry main:/Users/john $ .pwd
/Users/john
pry main:/Users/john $ shell-mode
pry(main)>
The cd command is used to move into a new object (or scope) inside a Pry session. When inside the new scope it becomes the self for the session and all commands and methods will operate on this new self.
pry(main)> self
=> main
pry(main)> cd Pry
pry(Pry):1> self
=> Pry
pry(Pry):1> cd ..
pry(main)>
The ls command is essentially a unified wrapper to a number of Ruby's introspection mechanisms, including (but not limited to) the following methods: methods, instance_variables, constants, local_variables, instance_methods, class_variables and all the various permutations thereof.
By default typing ls will return a list of just the local and instance variables available in the current context.
Simply typing show-method method_name will pull the source for the method and display it with syntax highlighting. You can also look up the source for multiple methods at the same time, by typing show-method method1 method2. As a convenience, Pry looks up both instance methods and class methods using this syntax, with priority given to instance methods.
pry(Pry):1> show-method rep
From: /Users/john/ruby/projects/pry/lib/pry/pry_instance.rb @ line 191:
Number of lines: 6
def rep(target=TOPLEVEL_BINDING)
target = Pry.binding_for(target)
result = re(target)
show_result(result) if should_print?
end
Pry is primarily the work of John Mair (banisterfiend)