# Load A Module And Execute A Statement Here is a nice one-liner pattern for use with the `ruby` executable. ```bash $ ruby -r file.rb -e 'MyClass.do_something' ``` The `-r` flag loads (requires, really) a Ruby file at the specified path. The `-e` flag will execute the line of Ruby code that you give it, in that context. In combination that means I can load some module into the execution environment and then I can run some code that uses that module. A more practical example of that is how I demonstrated the behavior of a `MarkdownHelpers` module in [Create A Module Of Utility Functions](create-a-module-of-utility-functions.md). ```bash $ ruby -r ./markdown_helpers.rb -e 'puts MarkdownHelpers.link("Click here", "https://example.com")' [Click here](https://example.com) ``` The `MarkdownHelpers` module that I've defined in `./markdown_helpers.rb` is loaded into context and I can now access and execute that module to try out parts of it. All in a single line in the terminal.