Yes it is. Kernel.gets() reads from files specified as command-line options or STDIN, if none were given. This makes it easy to write Unix-style filters.
You can always shift the option out of ARGV before calling gets() with something like:
if ARGV.first == "-x"
ARGV.shift
# ...
end
Hope that helps.
James Edward Gray II
···
On Jan 4, 2006, at 9:17 AM, Shea Martin wrote:
<snip>
if ARGV.size > 0
puts "first arg is #{ARGV[0]}"
end
puts "enter text"
ans = gets
puts "you said #{ans}"
</snip>
Run this code, as ./test.rb. Then run it with an command line arg, like "./test.rb -x". And you will get an error like this:
"test.rb:3:in `gets': No such file or directory - -x (Errno::ENOENT)"
The fix I have found, is to change gets to $stdin.gets. I saw some traffic on the mailing list archives regarding this, but no resolution.
<snip>
if ARGV.size > 0
puts "first arg is #{ARGV[0]}"
end
puts "enter text"
ans = gets
puts "you said #{ans}"
</snip>
Run this code, as ./test.rb. Then run it with an command line arg, like "./test.rb -x". And you will get an error like this:
"test.rb:3:in `gets': No such file or directory - -x (Errno::ENOENT)"
The fix I have found, is to change gets to $stdin.gets. I saw some traffic on the mailing list archives regarding this, but no resolution.
Is this expected behaviour?
ruby -v is: ruby 1.8.3 (2005-09-21) [sparc-solaris2.10]
Thanks,
~S
I've run into this problem before as well, somebody pointed me to the ri documentation on Kernel#gets, it says the following.
Returns the next line from the list of files in +ARGV+, or from standard input if no files are present on the command line. Returns +nil+ at end of file.
<snip>
if ARGV.size > 0
puts "first arg is #{ARGV[0]}"
end
puts "enter text"
ans = gets
puts "you said #{ans}"
</snip>
Run this code, as ./test.rb. Then run it with an command line arg,
like "./test.rb -x". And you will get an error like this:
"test.rb:3:in `gets': No such file or directory - -x
(Errno::ENOENT)"
The fix I have found, is to change gets to $stdin.gets. I saw some
traffic on the mailing list archives regarding this, but no
resolution.
Is this expected behaviour?
Yes it is. Kernel.gets() reads from files specified as command-line
options or STDIN, if none were given. This makes it easy to write
Unix-style filters.
You can always shift the option out of ARGV before calling gets()
with something like:
if ARGV.first == "-x"
ARGV.shift
# ...
end
I'd prefer to use OptionParser.parse! for this - but otherwise totally
agree.