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I recently converted a ruby library to a gem, which seemed to break the command line usability

Worked fine as a library

  $ ruby -r foobar -e 'p FooBar.question' # => "answer"

And as a gem, irb knows how to require a gem from command-line switches

  $ irb -rubygems -r foobar
  irb(main):001:0> FooBar.question # => "answer"

But the same fails for ruby itself:

  $ ruby -rubygems -r foobar -e 'p FooBar.question'
  ruby: no such file to load -- foobar (LoadError)

must I now do this, which seems ugly:

  ruby -rubygems -e 'require "foobar"; p FooBar.question' # => "answer"

Or is there a way to make the 2 switches work?

Note: I know the gem could add a bin/program for every useful method but I don't like to pollute the command line namespace unnecessarily

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2 Answers

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-rubygems is actually the same as -r ubygems.

It doesn't mess with your search path, as far as I understand, but I think it doesn't add anything to your -r search path either. I was able to do something like this:

ruby -rubygems -r /usr/lib/ruby/gems/myhelpfulclass-0.0.1/lib/MyHelpfulClass -e "puts MyHelpfulClass"

MyHelpfulClass.rb exists in the lib directory specified above.

That kind of sucks, but it at least demonstrates that you can have multiple -r equire directives.

As a slightly less ugly workaround, you can add additional items to the ruby library search path (colon delimited in *nix, semicolon delimited in windows).

export RUBYLIB=/usr/lib/ruby/gems/1.8/gems/myhelpfulclass-0.0.1/lib
ruby -rubygems -r MyHelpfulClass -e "puts MyHelpfulClass"

If you don't want to mess with the environment variable, you can add something to the load path yourself:

ruby -I /usr/lib/ruby/gems/1.8/gems/myhelpfulclass-0.0.1/lib \
   -rubygems -r MyHelpfulClass -e "puts MyHelpfulClass"
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You're right (observe 'ubygems.rb' in ruby/site_ruby/1.8), but then why does it fail with the 2 requires? Does it change the load path or something? – Orion Edwards Sep 23 '08 at 21:44
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You can set the RUBYOPT environment variable to rubygems to tell ruby to always load gems without the command line switch.

See here for reference

You could either do this globally for your user profile, or as a one-off (on *nix) like this:

RUBYOPT=rubygems ruby -e 'p FooBar.question'
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does that actually work for you? Iget: uninitialized constant FooBar (NameError) – Purfideas Sep 23 '08 at 21:47
It won't work in windows, and I forgot -r foobar, but it should work on linux or OSX or freebsd – Orion Edwards Sep 24 '08 at 2:36

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