I'm using gets
to pause my script's output until the user hits the enter key. If I don't pass any arguments to my script then it works fine. However, if I pass any arguments to my script then gets dies with the following error:
ruby main.rb -i
main.rb:74:in `gets': No such file or directory - -i (Errno::ENOENT)
from main.rb:74:in `gets'
...
The error message is showing the argument I passed to the script. Why would gets be looking at ARGV?
I'm using OptionParser to parse my command line arguments. If I use parse!
instead of parse
(so it removes things it parses from the argument list) then the application works fine.
So it looks like gets is reading from ARGV for some reason. Why? Is this expected? Is there a way to get it to not do that (doing gets()
didn't help).
Ruby will automatically treat unparsed arguments as filenames, then open and read the files making the input available to
ARGF
($<
). By default,gets
reads from ARGF. To bypass that:It has been suggested that you could use
STDIN
instead of$stdin
, but it's usually better to use$stdin
.Additionally, after you capture the input you want from
ARGV
, you can use:Then you'll be free to
gets
without it reading from files you may not have intended to read.The whole point of
Kernel#gets
is to treat the arguments passed to the program as filenames and read those files. The very first sentence in the documentation reads:That's just how
gets
works. If you want to read from a specificIO
object (say,$stdin
), just callgets
on that object.