Lisp programmers often use the REPL (similar to IRB) as a simple way
to make an interactive interface to their app. I'd like to do the
same thing with irb - that is, define my classes, and load irb in the
context.
I can get about half way there:
require 'irb'
IRB.start
my_class = MyClass.new(...) # I want this to be the context
irb my_class
...works, but you have to type "quit" to load. Is there a better way
to leverage IRB from within my code? What do the Ruby hackers say? (I
know a lot have a Lisp background, and so wouldn't want Ruby to not
have a REPL shell...)
Another, similar problem with the above:
irb my_class
conf.prompt_mode = :SIMPLE # This line is ignored
···
On Nov 19, 6:21 pm, "S. Robert James" <srobertja...@gmail.com> wrote:
Lisp programmers often use the REPL (similar to IRB) as a simple way
to make an interactive interface to their app. I'd like to do the
same thing with irb - that is, define my classes, and load irb in the
context.
I can get about half way there:
require 'irb'
IRB.start
my_class = MyClass.new(...) # I want this to be the context
irb my_class
...works, but you have to type "quit" to load. Is there a better way
to leverage IRB from within my code? What do the Ruby hackers say? (I
know a lot have a Lisp background, and so wouldn't want Ruby to not
have a REPL shell...)
The MimickIRB class just wraps IRB's RubyLex class in a very simple
REPL. I don't know if this is exactly what you're looking for
(since it doesn't do debugging, .irbrc, or frames) but it's nice if
you want to start your own from nothing.
_why
···
On Tue, Nov 20, 2007 at 08:25:00AM +0900, S. Robert James wrote:
Lisp programmers often use the REPL (similar to IRB) as a simple way
to make an interactive interface to their app. I'd like to do the
same thing with irb - that is, define my classes, and load irb in the
context.
And have a look at s3sh in the bin dir. It's basically just a shell
script. It just aims regular old IRB at a setup file which establishes
some relevant variables and loads some relevant modules.
Rails console does nearly exactly the same thing - all it really adds
in is more libraries and some command-line args with optparse.
···
On 11/19/07, S. Robert James <srobertjames@gmail.com> wrote:
Lisp programmers often use the REPL (similar to IRB) as a simple way
to make an interactive interface to their app. I'd like to do the
same thing with irb - that is, define my classes, and load irb in the
context.
Lisp programmers often use the REPL (similar to IRB) as a simple way
to make an interactive interface to their app. I'd like to do the
same thing with irb - that is, define my classes, and load irb in the
context.
I can get about half way there:
require 'irb'
IRB.start
my_class = MyClass.new(...) # I want this to be the context
irb my_class
...works, but you have to type "quit" to load. Is there a better way
to leverage IRB from within my code? What do the Ruby hackers say? (I
know a lot have a Lisp background, and so wouldn't want Ruby to not
have a REPL shell...)
hmmm, I've also had some problems trying to add a command interface to
some code. I found trying to bend IRB to fit the needs seems to be
trickier than just coding up a solution in readline directly. Is that
really the best solution?
Cameron
···
On 11/19/07, S. Robert James <srobertjames@gmail.com> wrote:
On Nov 19, 6:21 pm, "S. Robert James" <srobertja...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Lisp programmers often use the REPL (similar to IRB) as a simple way
> to make an interactive interface to their app. I'd like to do the
> same thing with irb - that is, define my classes, and load irb in the
> context.
>
> I can get about half way there:
>
> require 'irb'
> IRB.start
> my_class = MyClass.new(...) # I want this to be the context
> irb my_class
>
> ...works, but you have to type "quit" to load. Is there a better way
> to leverage IRB from within my code? What do the Ruby hackers say? (I
> know a lot have a Lisp background, and so wouldn't want Ruby to not
> have a REPL shell...)
Another, similar problem with the above:
irb my_class
conf.prompt_mode = :SIMPLE # This line is ignored
Then you miss out on the full power of Ruby in your interface!
The beauty of using a REPL or IRB is that you have an easy command
line interface, with automatic scripting when you need it, expandable
to the full power of the host language as needed.
···
On Nov 19, 9:07 pm, Cameron McBride <cameron.mcbr...@gmail.com> wrote:
hmmm, I've also had some problems trying to add a command interface to
some code. I found trying to bend IRB to fit the needs seems to be
trickier than just coding up a solution in readline directly. Is that
really the best solution?
Sorry, I wasn't clear. I'm talking about building a ruby library and
then the CLI with readline does a stateful eval. Problem is that it
reimplements functionality that already exists in IRB.
Cameron
···
On 11/19/07, S. Robert James <srobertjames@gmail.com> wrote:
On Nov 19, 9:07 pm, Cameron McBride <cameron.mcbr...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> hmmm, I've also had some problems trying to add a command interface to
> some code. I found trying to bend IRB to fit the needs seems to be
> trickier than just coding up a solution in readline directly. Is that
> really the best solution?
>
> Cameron
Then you miss out on the full power of Ruby in your interface!
The beauty of using a REPL or IRB is that you have an easy command
line interface, with automatic scripting when you need it, expandable
to the full power of the host language as needed.