[Home](./index.md) > [bitburner](./bitburner.md) > [NS](./bitburner.ns.md) > [kill](./bitburner.ns.kill.md) ## NS.kill() method Terminate another script. **Signature:** ```typescript kill(script: number): boolean; ``` ## Parameters | Parameter | Type | Description | | --- | --- | --- | | script | number | Filename or PID of the script to kill. | **Returns:** boolean True if the script is successfully killed, and false otherwise. ## Remarks RAM cost: 0.5 GB Kills the script on the target server specified by the script’s name and arguments. Remember that scripts are uniquely identified by both their names and arguments. For example, if `foo.script` is run with the argument 1, then this is not the same as `foo.script` run with the argument 2, even though they have the same name. ## Example 1 ```ts // NS1: //The following example will try to kill a script named foo.script on the foodnstuff server that was ran with no arguments: kill("foo.script", "foodnstuff"); //The following will try to kill a script named foo.script on the current server that was ran with no arguments: kill("foo.script", getHostname()); //The following will try to kill a script named foo.script on the current server that was ran with the arguments 1 and “foodnstuff”: kill("foo.script", getHostname(), 1, "foodnstuff"); ``` ## Example 2 ```ts // NS2: //The following example will try to kill a script named foo.script on the foodnstuff server that was ran with no arguments: ns.kill("foo.script", "foodnstuff"); //The following will try to kill a script named foo.script on the current server that was ran with no arguments: ns.kill("foo.script", getHostname()); //The following will try to kill a script named foo.script on the current server that was ran with the arguments 1 and “foodnstuff”: ns.kill("foo.script", getHostname(), 1, "foodnstuff"); ```