How do you clear the IRB console screen?
21 Answers
On Mac OS X or Linux you can use Ctrl + L to clear the IRB screen.
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11
Ctrl+L
also works in gnome-terminal, but something more programmatic issystem 'clear'
– vol7ronJun 6, 2013 at 15:54 -
With zsh ctrl + L doesn't work, ctrl + K does. (Oh My ZSH to be specific)– SidOfcJul 20, 2015 at 14:33
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2@fanaugen On MacOS,
cmd+k
will clear all within a terminal tap, if you use tmux to split area of the visual area,ctrl+L
will do a better work.– Fan YerMay 19, 2017 at 9:06 -
1
Throw this inside %userprofile%\.irbrc
and you're good
def cls
system('cls')
end
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14
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9
system('clear')
will also work on a Mac. It should be noted that this will leave=> true
at the top of the console. Mar 26, 2013 at 5:49 -
1@anthropomorphic `system('clear') will work on almost every Unix/Unix-like system.– enedilJul 29, 2014 at 13:47
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@enedil That's absolutely true, however many people don't know that OS X is a Unix-like system. Jul 30, 2014 at 0:54
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@anthropomorphic because it is not. OS X is certified Unix by Open Group.– enedilJul 30, 2014 at 10:02
On *nix boxes
`clear`
on Windows
system 'cls' # works
`cls` # does not work
on OSX
system 'clear' # works
`clear` # does not work
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3
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1You can add an alias such as
clear
you your pryrc file for this. Thanks for sharing Dec 18, 2017 at 15:29
On Ubuntu 11.10 system clear
will mostly clear the irb window. You get a return => True
value printed.
A big mess of ugly text
ruby-1.9.2-p290 :007 > system 'clear'
what ya get:
=> true
ruby-1.9.2-p290 :007 >
Just discovered this today: in Pry (an IRB alternative), a line of input that begins with a .
will be forwarded to the command shell. Which means on Mac & Linux, we can use:
. clear
And, on Windows (Command Prompt and Windows Terminal), we can use:
. cls
Source: pry.github.io
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I just tried this using raw irb under Ruby 2.0.0p481 on Windows and it doesn't work. Jul 17, 2014 at 13:00
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Yes. Seems it does not work in windows. But it surely does work in mac & Linux. Jul 18, 2014 at 8:06
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I like this answer the best. You don't have to modify anything and it's just shelling out. Simple to remember too. Btw,
. cls
should work on Windows. Jul 22, 2014 at 19:58 -
I wonder which command would work with tmux. I think Ctrl + L is the one as thatway_3 says down below.– PabloFeb 16, 2020 at 18:35
In order to clear the screen just do:
puts "\e[H\e[2J"
P.S. This was tested on Linux.
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1This is just the output from
`clear`
, and is equivalent toputs %x(/usr/bin/clear)
. Oct 19, 2013 at 14:56
On Linux Mint 17 also you can use Ctrl + Shift + L
or
Ctrl + L to clear the IRB screen.
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@thatway_3 - nice answer: how did you print the keyboard instructions on Stackoverflow?– BenKoshyMar 9, 2016 at 12:51
puts `clear`
Clears the screen and then returns => nil
Tested on Mac OSX 10.6 Terminal and iTerm2.
Method:
def clear_screen
if RUBY_PLATFORM =~ /win32|win64|\.NET|windows|cygwin|mingw32/i
system('cls')
else
system('clear')
end
end
Or in IRB you can use system('clear')
Tons of good answers here, but I often remote into a linux box with Mintty from windows. Kudos to the above about using .irbrc, but came up with this:
def cls
puts "\ec\e[3J"
end
def clear
puts "\e[H\e[2Js"
end
This gives you the options for both the *nix 'clear' behavior and the Windows 'cls' behavior, which I often find more useful if I really want to nuke the buffer rather than just scrolling it out of view.
P.S. a similar variant also works in .bashrc:
alias cls='echo -e "\ec\e[3J"'
If anyone could find a way to actually map that to a keystroke, I'd love to hear it. I would really like to have something akin to cmd-k on osx that would work in Mintty.
Add the following method to ~/.irbrc
:
def clear
conf.return_format = ""
system('clear')
end
Cntrl-L
or Cntrl-K
work in regular console but I'm using tmux and those mess the screen up inside the tmux window.
The conf.return_format = "" takes the nil off the return value.
Windows users simply try,
system 'cls'
OR
system('cls')
Looks like this in the IRB window,
irb(main):333:0> system 'cls'
irb(main):007:0> system('cls')
Did the trick for me in ruby 1.9.3. However the following commands did not work and returned => nil
,
system('clear')
system 'clear'
system `cls` #using the backquotes below ESC Key in windows
I've used this for executable files:
def clear
system("cls") || system("clear") || puts("\e[H\e[2J")
end
clear
I came here looking for a way to reset the tty with irb, since it wasn't printing newlines or showing what I typed somehow, only some output.
1.9.3-p125 :151 > system 'reset'
finally did the trick for me!
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@the Tin Man - backticks don't always operate how you think, but
reset
should work fine– vol7ronJun 6, 2013 at 15:57 -
Backticks always work how I expect but then, I've been using them in various languages for years and years. Jun 6, 2013 at 16:17
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Indeed, sometimes what resembles a backtick may indeed be some other UTF-8 creature. Occasionally I fix "text" docs with upper and lower quotation marks that are actually != the ANSI/ASCII " character. Like in commercial SRT files, where all hell breaks loose.– MarcosJul 24, 2014 at 8:30
For windows users:
If you create a bat file name c.bat whose contents are:
@echo off
cls
Then, in IRB, you can say:
system('c')
to clear the console. I just thought I would share because I thought that was pretty cool. Essentially anything in the path is accessible.
->(a,b,c){x=a.method(b);a.send(c,b){send c,b,&x;false};print"\e[2J\e[H \e[D"}[irb_context,:echo?,:define_singleton_method]
This will fully clear your IRB screen, with no extra empty lines and “=> nil” stuff. Tested on Linux/Windows.
This one-liner could be expanded as:
lambda {
original_echo = irb_context.method(:echo?)
irb_context.send(:define_singleton_method, :echo?) {
send :define_singleton_method, :echo?, &original_echo
false
}
print "\e[2J\e[H \e[D"
}.call
This uses lots of tricks.
Firstly, irb will call echo?
to check if the result should be printed. I saved the method, then redefined with a method which restores the defination but returns false so irb will not echo the result.
Secondly, I printed some ANSI control chars. \e[2J
will clean the screen and \e[H
will move the cursor to the upper left position of the screen. \e[D
will print a space and then move back the cursor while this is a workaround for something strange on Windows.
Finally this is kind of not practical at all. Just smile ;)
The backtick operator captures the output of the command and returns it
s = `cls`
puts s
would work better, I guess.
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1
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@OrionEdwards @JesperE the first line showed me
"\f"
which is what you got and thenputs s
outputs this♀
I wonder why?– LuckySep 29, 2014 at 11:59