3
ruby somescript.rb somehugelonglistoftextforprocessing

is this a bad idea? rather should i create a separate flat file containig the somehugelonglistoftextforprocessing, and let somescript.rb read it ?

does it matter if the script argument is very very long text(1KB~300KB) ? what are some problems that can arise if any.

1 Answer 1

6

As long as the limits of your command-line handling code (e.g., bash or ruby itself) are not exceeded, you should have no technical problems in doing this.

Whether it's a good idea is another matter. Do you really want to have to type in a couple of hundred kilobytes every single time you run your program? Do you want to have to remember to put quotes around your data if it contains spaces?

There are a number of ways I've seen this handled which you may want to consider (this list is by no means exhaustive):

  • Change your code so that, if there's no arguments, read the information from standard input - this will allow you to do either
       ruby somescript.rb myData
    or
       ruby somescript.rb <myFile.txt.

  • Use a special character to indicate file input (I've seen @ used in this way). So,
       ruby somescript.rb myData
    would use the data supplied on the command line whilst
       ruby somescript.rb @myFile.txt
    would get the data from the file.

My advice would be to use the file-based method for that size of data and allow an argument to be used if specified. This covers both possible scenarios:

  • Lots of data, put it in a file so you won't have to retype it every time you want to run your command.
  • Not much data, allow it to be passed as an argument so that you don't have to create a file for something that's easier to type in on the command line.
1
  • I second paxdiablo's recommendation. There's some good discussion of this approach on another SO thread that might be useful Nov 13, 2009 at 11:59

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.