require "pry/default_commands/ls" require "pry/default_commands/cd" require "pry/default_commands/find_method" class Pry module DefaultCommands Context = Pry::CommandSet.new do import Ls import Cd import FindMethod command "whereami", "Show the code context for the session. (whereami shows extra lines of code around the invocation line. Default: 5)" do |num| file, line_num = file_and_line_from_binding(target) i_num = num ? num.to_i : 5 if file != Pry.eval_path && (file =~ /(\(.*\))|<.*>/ || file == "" || file == "-e") raise CommandError, "Cannot find local context. Did you use binding.pry?" end set_file_and_dir_locals(file) method = Pry::Method.from_binding(target) method_description = method ? " in #{method.name_with_owner}" : "" code = Pry::Code.from_file(file).around(line_num, i_num) if !code.empty? output.puts "\n#{text.bold('From:')} #{file} @ line #{line_num}#{method_description}:\n\n" output.puts code.with_line_numbers.with_marker(line_num) output.puts end end create_command "pry-backtrace", "Show the backtrace for the Pry session." do banner <<-BANNER Usage: pry-backtrace [OPTIONS] [--help] Show the backtrace for the position in the code where Pry was started. This can be used to infer the behavior of the program immediately before it entered Pry, just like the backtrace property of an exception. (NOTE: if you are looking for the backtrace of the most recent exception raised, just type: `_ex_.backtrace` instead, see https://github.com/pry/pry/wiki/Special-Locals) e.g: pry-backtrace BANNER def process output.puts "\n#{text.bold('Backtrace:')}\n--\n" stagger_output _pry_.backtrace.join("\n") end end command "reset", "Reset the REPL to a clean state." do output.puts "Pry reset." exec "pry" end create_command /wtf([?!]*)/, "Show the backtrace of the most recent exception" do options :listing => 'wtf?' banner <<-BANNER Show's a few lines of the backtrace of the most recent exception (also available as _ex_.backtrace). If you want to see more lines, add more question marks or exclamation marks: e.g. pry(main)> wtf? pry(main)> wtf?!???!?!? To see the entire backtrace, pass the -v/--verbose flag: e.g. pry(main)> wtf -v BANNER def options(opt) opt.on(:v, :verbose, "Show the full backtrace.") end def process raise Pry::CommandError, "No most-recent exception" unless _pry_.last_exception output.puts "#{text.bold('Exception:')} #{_pry_.last_exception.class}: #{_pry_.last_exception}\n--" if opts.verbose? output.puts Code.new(_pry_.last_exception.backtrace, 0, :text).with_line_numbers.to_s else output.puts Code.new(_pry_.last_exception.backtrace.first([captures[0].size, 0.5].max * 10), 0, :text).with_line_numbers.to_s end end end # N.B. using a regular expresion here so that "raise-up 'foo'" does the right thing. create_command /raise-up(!?\b.*)/, :listing => 'raise-up' do description "Raise an exception out of the current pry instance." banner <<-BANNER Raise up, like exit, allows you to quit pry. Instead of returning a value however, it raises an exception. If you don't provide the exception to be raised, it will use the most recent exception (in pry _ex_). e.g. `raise-up "get-me-out-of-here"` is equivalent to: `raise "get-me-out-of-here" raise-up` When called as raise-up! (with an exclamation mark), this command raises the exception through any nested prys you have created by "cd"ing into objects. BANNER def process return stagger_output help if captures[0] =~ /(-h|--help)\b/ # Handle 'raise-up', 'raise-up "foo"', 'raise-up RuntimeError, 'farble' in a rubyesque manner target.eval("_pry_.raise_up#{captures[0]}") end end end end end