You're going to make a file that will print "Hello World!" to your terminal.
- Create a new Ruby file.
- Write syntactically valid code to produce "Hello World!"
- Run a Ruby file.
- Run the Learn gem.
- Submit a Learn lab.
Get started by opening this lab with 'learn open' or by clicking the Open button in the toolbar.
The first step is to create a text file called hello_world.rb
. The .rb
file extension is a common convention for specifying the language of the file - in this case, Ruby. You can create a file by making a new file in your favorite text editor and saving it into this lab's directory. Or you can type touch hello_world.rb
within your terminal (note, however, that you won't see any output in Terminal with touch
), once you've navigated into this lab's directory with cd
. If you have Sublime Text and the Sublime Text symlink subl
set up, you can also type subl .
within this lab's directory to open the entire directory in Sublime (very useful).
In the file hello_world.rb
that you created, you need to write a single line of code that prints the string Hello World! to your terminal. To print in Ruby, you need to use the method puts
which is short for "output string." And because Hello World! is a string, you need to surround your text with ""
.
File: hello_world.rb
puts "Hello World!"
Execute this file by typing ruby hello_world.rb
into your terminal and pressing enter
. The ruby
part of that command tells your computer to use the Ruby interpreter when reading and executing the code in your file. The second part of the command, hello_world.rb
is the path to the file you want to run.
You should see:
$ ruby hello_world.rb
Hello World!
Confirm everything is working by running the learn
command.
Note: Case matters, and your test will not pass unless you print "Hello World!" exactly
Submit your solution with learn submit
and this lab is done, but your adventure in Ruby has only just begun!
Hello World! by Brian Kernighan, from Artsy's Algorythm Auction based on a 1974 Bell Laboratories internal memorandum by Brian Kernighan, Programming in C: A Tutorial, which contains the first known version.