How can I start an interactive console for Perl, similar to the irb
command for Ruby or python
for Python?
24 Answers
You can use the perl debugger on a trivial program, like so:
perl -de1
Alternatively there's Alexis Sukrieh's Perl Console application, but I haven't used it.
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38
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control
+L
doesn't work under this command interface, how should I refresh the screen?– ZenFeb 26, 2015 at 11:13 -
2With the benefit of hindsight: Ján Sáreník's answer seems to provide the best almost-out-of-the-box solution (you may have to install
rlwrap
). All third-party REPL/console solutions, includingperlconsole
, are cumbersome to install and often have more limitations. Jul 8, 2015 at 3:09 -
3Unfortunately,
perl -de1
doesn't seem to supportmy
variables, and hashes don't work either, for some reason…– GeremiaSep 5, 2016 at 16:41 -
1
Not only did Matt Trout write an article about a REPL, he actually wrote one - Devel::REPL
I've used it a bit and it works fairly well, and it's under active development.
BTW, I have no idea why someone modded down the person who mentioned using "perl -e" from the console. This isn't really a REPL, true, but it's fantastically useful, and I use it all the time.
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I think it was assumed I didn't understand the question. I guess I'll edit it a bit. ;-) Sep 16, 2008 at 17:56
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As of mid-2015: Simply running
[sudo] cpan Devel::REPL
didn't work for me, neither on OSX 10.10 (Perl 5.18.2) nor on Ubuntu 14.04 (Perl 5.18.2): I get runtime errors complaining about missing modules; installed one, then gave up after another missing module was reported. Jul 7, 2015 at 16:31 -
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@Starfish: Thanks; to save future readers time (since it sounds like the answer may be short): how do you turn this setting on? Aug 7, 2016 at 3:31
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1By the way, Matt Trout, the
re.pl
author, wrote an article listing several alternatives, and he himself suggests usingreply
instead ofre.pl
: shadow.cat/blog/matt-s-trout/mstpan-17 Oct 31, 2016 at 10:16
I wrote a script I call "psh":
#! /usr/bin/perl
while (<>) {
chomp;
my $result = eval;
print "$_ = $result\n";
}
Whatever you type in, it evaluates in Perl:
> gmtime(2**30)
gmtime(2**30) = Sat Jan 10 13:37:04 2004
> $x = 'foo'
$x = 'foo' = foo
> $x =~ s/o/a/g
$x =~ s/o/a/g = 2
> $x
$x = faa
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4Does this work for one liners only or can handle multiline Perl code like conditional branching, loops, nested statements?– DavidJan 23, 2015 at 0:36
If you want history, use rlwrap. This could be your ~/bin/ips
for example:
#!/bin/sh
echo 'This is Interactive Perl shell'
rlwrap -A -pgreen -S"perl> " perl -wnE'say eval()//$@'
And this is how it looks like:
$ ips
This is Interactive Perl shell
perl> 2**128
3.40282366920938e+38
perl>
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8Kudos for wrapping it up nicely - readline support is not only needed for history, but also for editing the command line. With the exception of multi-line support, this works well; here's an alias version as an alternative:
alias iperl='rlwrap -A -S "perl> " perl -wnE '\''say eval()//$@'\'
. OSX users can installrlwrap
via Homebrew withbrew install rlwrap
. Jul 7, 2015 at 16:26 -
5Here is a version that gives a nice output when the expression evaluates to a list or a reference:
rlwrap -A -pgreen -S'perl> ' perl -MData::Dumper -wnE'say Dumper[eval()]//$@'
– michauJul 14, 2019 at 17:49
I think you're asking about a REPL (Read, Evaluate, Print, Loop) interface to perl. There are a few ways to do this:
- Matt Trout has an article that describes how to write one
- Adriano Ferreira has described some options
- and finally, you can hop on IRC at irc.perl.org and try out one of the eval bots in many of the popular channels. They will evaluate chunks of perl that you pass to them.
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1Matt Trout's article has been down since some years ago, you can find it here: web.archive.org/web/20100212100032/http://chainsawblues.vox.com/…– lepeJul 26, 2016 at 6:40
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1Matt Trout now has a far more up to date list of REPLs he recommends: shadow.cat/blog/matt-s-trout/mstpan-17 Oct 6, 2016 at 22:33
I use the command line as a console:
$ perl -e 'print "JAPH\n"'
Then I can use my bash history to get back old commands. This does not preserve state, however.
This form is most useful when you want to test "one little thing" (like when answering Perl questions). Often, I find these commands get scraped verbatim into a shell script or makefile.
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1
There isn't an interactive console for Perl built in like Python does. You can however use the Perl Debugger to do debugging related things. You turn it on with the -d option, but you might want to check out 'man perldebug' to learn about it.
After a bit of googling, there is a separate project that implements a Perl console which you can find at Perl Console - Perl code interactive evaluator with completion.
Hope this helps!
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Strange that this answer hasn't received any upvotes, even though it was earlier than the accepted answer and provides a bit more info too. +1– JunuxxOct 18, 2012 at 13:37
There are two popular Perl REPLs.
- Devel::REPL is great.
- But IMO Reply is better.
For reply
just run it as a command. The module install the reply
script. If you had installed the module and you don't have the command, check your PATH
variable.
$ reply --help
reply [-lb] [-I dir] [-M mod] [--version] [--help] [--cfg file]
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9+1 for recommending Reply. Devel::REPL's author himself recommended Reply over its own solution when I ask about a good Perl REPL (console) on IRC. Reply also comes with auto-completion that is very handy for inspecting an object's available methods and attributes. I could install Reply on Ubuntu with the following command:
sudo apt-get install libreply-perl
. Then it can be run simply typingreply
in a terminal.– ApteryxJul 26, 2015 at 19:37 -
1How do you install amd run Reply? Neither the Metacpan, nor the Github page provides instructions.– PhilippeSep 17, 2019 at 6:51
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You can always just drop into the built-in debugger and run commands from there.
perl -d -e 1
I've created perli
, a Perl REPL that runs on Linux, macOS, and Windows.
Its focus is automatic result printing, convenient documentation lookups, and easy
inspection of regular-expression matches.
You can see screenshots here.
It works stand-alone (has no dependencies other than Perl itself), but installation of rlwrap
is strongly recommended so as to support command-line editing, persistent command history, and tab-completion - read more here.
Installation
If you happen to have Node.js installed:
npm install -g perli
Otherwise:
Unix-like platforms: Download this script as
perli
to a folder in your system's path and make it executable withchmod +x
.Windows: Download the this script as
perli.pl
(note the.pl
extension) to a folder in your system's path.
If you don't mind invoking Perli asperli.pl
, you're all set.
Otherwise, create a batch file namedperli.cmd
in the same folder with the following content:@%~dpn.pl %*
; this enables invocation as justperli
.
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2I like it can launch
perldoc
fromperli
REPL like'someCommand ?'
. Looks like it hasn't been updated for a while though, are you still maintaining perli?– user3905644Jul 16, 2017 at 9:05 -
3@sdkks: If you find a problem, do report it on GitHub and I'll try to fix it.
perli
hasn't been updated in a while, because in my personal use I haven't come across any issues, and few other people seem to use it, but, as far as I know, it still works as advertised. Jul 16, 2017 at 11:57 -
3I reported an issue and @mklement0 had it fixed and a new version released in less than 24 hours, FWIW. :) Feb 23, 2021 at 18:44
Perl doesn't have a console but the debugger can be used as one. At a command prompt, type perl -de 1
. (The value "1" doesn't matter, it's just a valid statement that does nothing.)
There are also a couple of options for a Perl shell:
Archived "perlfaq3" page which contain question "Is there Perl Shell?"
For more information read perlfaq3 (current version).
I always did:
rlwrap perl -wlne'eval;print$@if$@'
With 5.10, I've switched to:
rlwrap perl -wnE'say eval()//$@'
(rlwrap is optional)
You could look into psh here: http://gnp.github.io/psh/
It's a full on shell (you can use it in replacement of bash for example), but uses perl syntax.. so you can create methods on the fly etc.
Update: I've since created a downloadable REPL - see my other answer.
With the benefit of hindsight:
- The third-party solutions mentioned among the existing answers are either cumbersome to install and/or do not work without non-trivial, non-obvious additional steps - some solutions appear to be at least half-abandoned.
- A usable REPL needs the readline library for command-line-editing keyboard support and history support - ensuring this is a trouble spot for many third-party solutions.
- If you install CLI
rlwrap
, which provides readline support to any command, you can combine it with a simple Perl command to create a usable REPL, and thus make do without third-party REPL solutions.- On OSX, you can install
rlwrap
via Homebrew withbrew install rlwrap
. - Linux distros should offer
rlwrap
via their respective package managers; e.g., on Ubuntu, usesudo apt-get install rlwrap
. - See Ján Sáreník's answer for said combination of
rlwrap
and a Perl command.
- On OSX, you can install
What you do NOT get with Ján's answer:
- auto-completion
- ability to enter multi-line statements
The only third-party solution that offers these (with non-trivial installation + additional, non-obvious steps), is psh, but:
it hasn't seen activity in around 2.5 years
its focus is different in that it aims to be a full-fledged shell replacement, and thus works like a traditional shell, which means that it doesn't automatically evaluate a command as a Perl statement, and requires an explicit output command such as
print
to print the result of an expression.
Ján Sáreník's answer can be improved in one way:
- By default, it prints arrays/lists/hashtables as scalars, i.e., only prints their element count, whereas it would be handy to enumerate their elements instead.
If you install the Data::Printer
module with [sudo] cpan Data::Printer
as a one-time operation, you can load it into the REPL for use of the p()
function, to which you can pass lists/arrays/hashtables for enumeration.
Here's an alias named iperl
with readline and Data::Printer
support, which can you put in your POSIX-like shell's initialization file (e.g., ~/.bashrc
):
alias iperl='rlwrap -A -S "iperl> " perl -MData::Printer -wnE '\''BEGIN { say "# Use `p @<arrayOrList>` or `p %<hashTable>` to print arrays/lists/hashtables; e.g.: `p %ENV`"; } say eval()//$@'\'
E.g., you can then do the following to print all environment variables via hashtable %ENV
:
$ iperl # start the REPL
iperl> p %ENV # print key-value pairs in hashtable %ENV
As with Ján's answer, the scalar result of an expression is automatically printed; e.g.:
iperl> 22 / 7 # automatically print scalar result of expression: 3.14285714285714
Under Debian/Ubuntu:
$ sudo apt-get install libdevel-repl-perl
$ re.pl
$ sudo apt-get install libapp-repl-perl
$ iperl
Matt Trout's overview lists five choices, from perl -de 0
onwards, and he recommends Reply
, if extensibility via plugins is important, or tinyrepl
from Eval::WithLexicals
, for a minimal, pure-perl solution that includes readline support and lexical persistence.
You can do it online (like many things in life) here:
You can use org-babel
in emacs
; Open an org-mode
file, i.e., tmp.org
, and then you can do:
#+begin_src perl :results output
@a = (1,5,9);
print ((join ", ", @a) . "\n");
$b = scalar @a;
print "$#a, $b\n";
print "$#a, " . @a . "\n";
print join ", ", 1..$#a; print "\n";
print join ", ", @a[0..$#a]
#+end_src
Pressing CTRL-c CTRL-c
evals the block:
#+RESULTS:
#+begin_example
1, 5, 9
2, 3
2, 3
1, 2
1, 5, 9
#+end_example
I am not sure what emacs config this needs to work, but I think you can just install https://github.com/hlissner/doom-emacs and enable its perl
and org-mode
modules.