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Home/ Questions/Q 728711
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 14, 20262026-05-14T06:42:46+00:00 2026-05-14T06:42:46+00:00

In ruby, is it possible to specify to call another ruby script using the

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In ruby, is it possible to specify to call another ruby script using the same ruby interpreter as the original script is being run by?

For example, if a.rb runs b.rb a couple of times, is it possible to replace

system("ruby", "b.rb", "foo", "bar")

with something like

run_ruby("b.rb", "foo", "bar")

so that if you used ruby1.9.1 a.rb on the original, ruby1.9.1 would be used on b.rb, but if you just used ruby a.rb on the original, ruby would be used on b.rb?

I’d prefer not to use shebangs, as I’d like it to be able to run on different computers, some of which don’t have /usr/bin/env.

Edit: I didn’t mean load or require and the like, but spawning new processes (so I can use multiple CPUs).

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-14T06:42:47+00:00Added an answer on May 14, 2026 at 6:42 am

    Avdi Grimm wrote a series of articles on the Devver blog about different ways to start Ruby subprocesses last summer:

    • A Dozen (or so) Ways to Start Subprocesses in Ruby: Part 1
    • A Dozen (or so) Ways to Start Subprocesses in Ruby: Part 2
    • A Dozen (or so) Ways to Start Subprocesses in Ruby: Part 3
    • Beware of pipe duplication in subprocesses

    [Note: it appears that part 4 hasn’t been published yet.]

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