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I see a lot of cool stuff I can add to my Ruby console. For example, a good list is "My .irbrc for console/irb".

I googled, but all I found is weblogs saying what gems people add to their .irbrc. No one is saying where to find it.

I cannot find "irbrc". I opened my home folder and, if I type IRB, it goes to the Ruby console, but I can't find this file. Can someone help me locate it?

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2 Answers 2

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It's a irbrc dotfile so you will need to ls -a in your home directory to find it. If it isn't in there, simply create a .irbrc file.

Mine's pretty simple but this is what I have in it:

require 'rubygems'
require 'ap'

require 'irb/completion'
ARGV.concat [ "--readline", "--prompt-mode", "simple" ]

module Readline
  module History
    LOG = "#{ENV['HOME']}/.irb-history"

    def self.write_log(line)
      File.open(LOG, 'ab') {|f| f << "#{line}\n"}
    end

    def self.start_session_log
      write_log("\n# session start: #{Time.now}\n\n")
      at_exit { write_log("\n# session stop: #{Time.now}\n") }
    end
  end

  alias :old_readline :readline
  def readline(*args)
    ln = old_readline(*args)
    begin
      History.write_log(ln)
    rescue
    end
    ln
  end
end

IRB::Irb.class_eval do
  def output_value
    ap @context.last_value
  end
end

Readline::History.start_session_log

require 'irb/ext/save-history'
IRB.conf[:SAVE_HISTORY] = 100
IRB.conf[:HISTORY_FILE] = "#{ENV['HOME']}/.irb-save-history"

IRB.conf[:PROMPT_MODE] = :SIMPLE
require 'irb/completion'
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  • thanks, will use your file, there are pretty good stuff in it. But still a question: so with setting this file, I don't need to like load them anymore in IRC? they just work? what are some reasons for it not to load successfully?
    – user1899082
    Feb 22, 2013 at 4:33
  • Hmm, my file may not load correctly because I'm requiring the awesome print gem (require 'ap') so you'll need to do a 'gem install awesome_print' but other than that I think it should all work. You'll just need to type irb from your command prompt and it should all be there.
    – Sean
    Feb 22, 2013 at 4:37
  • 1
    A "dot file" can be anywhere. The "dot file" convention means it's hidden and not normally displayed, but it doesn't necessarily mean it's in the home directory. Check Git's .git, and SVN's .svn folders, which can be anywhere the project is. Feb 22, 2013 at 4:46
  • 1
    Right but the convention for irbrc dotfile, which the question is about, is to be in the home directory. :) Obviously other dotfiles, like the .git ones you mention, can be in other locations.
    – Sean
    Feb 22, 2013 at 5:04
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If you are unable to find the file.irbrc in your home directory, simply create it in your home directory and fill it with some lines such as:

require "irb/completion"

Then your irb will automatically load completion module when you launch irb.

PS: it also works for UNIX/Linux system.

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