48

a rails console output looks like this:

User.all
=> [#<User id: 1, name: "Michael Hartl", email: "[email protected]",
created_at: "2011-12-05 00:57:46", updated_at: "2011-12-05 00:57:46">,
#<User id: 2, name: "A Nother", email: "[email protected]", created_at:
"2011-12-05 01:05:24", updated_at: "2011-12-05 01:05:24">]

I was wondering if there is command that can make it easier to read? for example there was a .pretty command in MongoDB console that was formatting the output a little more eye friendly. But not sure if there is something similar in Rails or not.

8 Answers 8

76

A bit more elegant shorthand:

y User.all
7
  • 1
    This is by far the simplest I've found as well as the nicest formatting of the output. Feb 16, 2015 at 14:39
  • 2
    WOW ! I didn't know this, but it does the job ... and works in any project, no gem to add (it's part of the Kernel AFAIK) !!! Perfect, Thanks !
    – gfd
    Oct 6, 2015 at 13:15
  • 1
    Exactly what I needed. Thank you
    – jgrant
    Nov 28, 2016 at 20:35
  • 4
    I don't know if it's just me but this is even worse than what the original problem was. Instead of getting all the records bunched together this gives me about 50 lines per record of mostly useless info. May 12, 2017 at 2:27
  • 2
    @SteveCarey Indeed, from Rails v4 I think it prints everything. So if this doesn't work for you then try: User.find_each { |u| y u.attributes }.
    – valk
    May 12, 2017 at 20:48
46

I've been using pp. The pp stands for "pretty print." No Gem required.

On rails console try doing this:

pp User.all

You'll get each attributes and their value in the record display in a row instead a bundle of them if you simply do User.all.

Here's the documentation:

https://ruby-doc.org/stdlib-2.1.0/libdoc/pp/rdoc/PP.html

I am using Rails 5.1.3 and ruby 2.4.1p111 and it came already installed in my project. If this don't work, I imagine you have to do require 'pp'. I hope this helps.

1
  • 2
    This was the best answer for my project. Yaml formatted ruby objects IS NOT PRETTY PRINT.
    – workernode
    Jun 1, 2018 at 21:00
30

If you don't want to use a gem, here's the low rent version:

 puts User.all.to_yaml
1
  • great suggestion as it does not require dependencies Jul 23, 2015 at 17:21
11

Also you could use this incredible gem:

Awesome Print

8

You could try the awesome_print gem : https://github.com/michaeldv/awesome_print

Once installed, you can pretty print any object using :

ap User.all
4
  • Doesn't pretty print ActiveRecord for me. It does pretty print other containers, though. Sep 12, 2013 at 11:51
  • @Anthony Alberto In github page github.com/awesome-print/awesome_print#awesome-print it says: NOTE: awesome_print v1.2.0 is the last release supporting Ruby versions prior to v1.9.3 and Rails versions prior to v3.0. The upcoming awesome_print v2.0 will require Ruby v1.9.3 or later and Rails v3.0 or later. This means that I can't use awesome_print in Rails 4 or 5?
    – ltdev
    Feb 6, 2017 at 15:14
  • @Lykos, this means that you can't use awesome_print version 2.0 when using a Rails version below 3. You can use awesome_print with any Rails version, you just have to choose the appropriate version of awesome_print to match: a) If you are using Rails 3, 4, or 5, you should use awesome_print v2.0. b) If you are using Rails 1 or 2, you must use awesome_print v1.2.
    – Finn
    Jan 6, 2018 at 16:07
  • awesome_print v1.8.0 seems to be latest as of today, and works fine with Rails 5.2.3 for me, including on User.all as noted above Oct 21, 2019 at 0:01
6

Here are a few options

yaml format (no dependencies)

y your_code

awesome_print

gem install awesome_print

Then in irb or pry

require 'awesome_print'
ap your_code
5

Use pry

Without pry:

2.3.1 :001 > SupplierTerm.first
  SupplierTerm Load (39.4ms)  SELECT  "supplier_terms".* FROM "supplier_terms" ORDER BY "supplier_terms"."id" ASC LIMIT $1  [["LIMIT", 1]]
 => #<SupplierTerm id: "1bc48081-402a-41d9-b6af-d783c28bb363", 
entity_id: "927b398f-2bbd-40cb-b668-eb284e26688d", uses_custom_terms: 
false, requires_credit_check: false, requires_identity_check: false, 
requires_guarantees: true, requires_trade_reference_check: true, 
minimum_guarantees: 1, minimum_trade_references: 1, trade_account_limit: 
20000, created_at: "2017-02-01 22:11:49", updated_at: "2017-02-01 
22:11:49", created_by_id: "2c314f8a-6d84-48c8-a963-75130e97f1a6", 
updated_by_id: "2c314f8a-6d84-48c8-a963-75130e97f1a6", questions: [], 
minimum_approvers: 1, excluded_sources: nil> 

With pry:

2.3.1 :002 > pry
[1] pry(main)> SupplierTerm.first
  SupplierTerm Load (0.4ms)  SELECT  "supplier_terms".* FROM "supplier_terms" ORDER BY "supplier_terms"."id" ASC LIMIT $1  [["LIMIT", 1]]
=> #<SupplierTerm:0x007fb4e1feff40
 id: "1bc48081-402a-41d9-b6af-d783c28bb363",
 entity_id: "927b398f-2bbd-40cb-b668-eb284e26688d",
 uses_custom_terms: false,
 requires_credit_check: false,
 requires_identity_check: false,
 requires_guarantees: true,
 requires_trade_reference_check: true,
 minimum_guarantees: 1,
 minimum_trade_references: 1,
 trade_account_limit: 20000,
 created_at: Wed, 01 Feb 2017 22:11:49 UTC +00:00,
 updated_at: Wed, 01 Feb 2017 22:11:49 UTC +00:00,
 created_by_id: "2c314f8a-6d84-48c8-a963-75130e97f1a6",
 updated_by_id: "2c314f8a-6d84-48c8-a963-75130e97f1a6",
 questions: [],
 minimum_approvers: 1,
 excluded_sources: nil>
2

There is an awesome gem called Jazz Hands. Includes pry-based enhancements, hirb, and awesome_print in rails console.

P.S. You might want to use the fork Jazz Fingers to make it compatible with Ruby 2.1.2

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