[#20675] RCR: non-bang equivalent to []= — Tobias Reif <tobiasreif@...>

Hi,

49 messages 2001/09/01
[#20774] Re: RCR: non-bang equivalent to []= — Tobias Reif <tobiasreif@...> 2001/09/03

I wrote:

[#20778] Re: RCR: non-bang equivalent to []= — Kevin Smith <kevinbsmith@...> 2001/09/03

--- Tobias Reif <tobiasreif@pinkjuice.com> wrote:

[#20715] oreilly buch von matz - website online — markus jais <info@...>

hi

43 messages 2001/09/02
[#20717] Re: OReilly Ruby book has snail on cover — ptkwt@...1.aracnet.com (Phil Tomson) 2001/09/02

Actually, thanks for posting it here. I was trying to search OReilly's

[#20922] Re: OReilly Ruby book has snail on cover — Paul Brannan <pbrannan@...> 2001/09/05

On Mon, 3 Sep 2001, Phil Tomson wrote:

[#20768] Minor cgi.rb question — "Hal E. Fulton" <hal9000@...>

I don't have much experience with

25 messages 2001/09/03

[#20770] Calling member methods from C++ — jglueck@... (Bernhard Glk)

Some quetsions have been solved for me, but my message system does not

12 messages 2001/09/03

[#20976] destructor — Frank Sonnemans <ruby@...>

Does Ruby have a destructor as in C++?

25 messages 2001/09/07

[#21218] Ruby objects <-> XML: anyone working on this? — senderista@... (Tobin Baker)

Are there any Ruby analogs of these two Python modules (xml_pickle,

13 messages 2001/09/15

[#21296] nested require files need path internally — Bob Gustafson <bobgus@...>

Version: 1.64

29 messages 2001/09/18
[#21298] Re: nested require files need path internally — David Alan Black <dblack@...> 2001/09/18

Hello --

[#21302] Re: nested require files need path internally — Bob Gustafson <bobgus@...> 2001/09/18

On Tue, 18 Sep 2001, David Alan Black wrote:

[#21303] Re: nested require files need path internally — matz@... (Yukihiro Matsumoto) 2001/09/18

Hi,

[#21306] Re: nested require files need path internally — Lars Christensen <larsch@...> 2001/09/18

On Tue, 18 Sep 2001, Yukihiro Matsumoto wrote:

[#21307] Re: nested require files need path internally — matz@... (Yukihiro Matsumoto) 2001/09/18

Hi,

[#21331] Re: nested require files need path internally — Paul Brannan <pbrannan@...> 2001/09/18

> The big difference is C++ search done in compile time, Ruby search

[#21340] Re: nested require files need path internally — matz@... (Yukihiro Matsumoto) 2001/09/18

Hi,

[#21353] Re: nested require files need path internally — Paul Brannan <pbrannan@...> 2001/09/18

On Wed, 19 Sep 2001, Yukihiro Matsumoto wrote:

[#21366] Re: nested require files need path internally — matz@... (Yukihiro Matsumoto) 2001/09/19

Hi,

[#21368] Re: nested require files need path internally — "Julian Fitzell" <julian-ml@...4.com> 2001/09/19

On 19/09/2001 at 10:12 AM matz@ruby-lang.org wrote:

[#21376] Re: nested require files need path internally — matz@... (Yukihiro Matsumoto) 2001/09/19

Hi,

[#21406] Re: nested require files need path internally — Paul Brannan <pbrannan@...> 2001/09/19

On Wed, 19 Sep 2001, Yukihiro Matsumoto wrote:

[#21315] Suggestions for new CGI lib — anders@... (Anders Johannsen)

From the comp.lang.ruby thread "Minor cgi.rb question" (2001-09-03), I

21 messages 2001/09/18

[#21413] Ruby/objects book in style of The Little Lisper — Brian Marick <marick@...>

I fell in love with Lisp in the early 80's. Back then, I read a book called

36 messages 2001/09/19
[#21420] Re: Ruby/objects book in style of The Little Lisper — Christopher Sawtell <csawtell@...> 2001/09/20

On 20 Sep 2001 06:19:44 +0900, Brian Marick wrote:

[#21479] Re: Ruby/objects book in style of The Little Lisper — Kevin Smith <kevinbsmith@...> 2001/09/21

--- Christopher Sawtell <csawtell@paradise.net.nz> wrote:

[#21491] SV: Re: Ruby/objects book in style of The Little Lisper — "Mikkel Damsgaard" <mikkel_damsgaard@...> 2001/09/21

[#21494] Re: SV: Re: Ruby/objects book in style of The Little Lisper — Kevin Smith <kevinbsmith@...> 2001/09/21

--- Mikkel Damsgaard <mikkel_damsgaard@mailme.dk> wrote:

[#21510] Re: SV: Re: Ruby/objects book in style of The Little Lisper — Todd Gillespie <toddg@...> 2001/09/22

On Sat, 22 Sep 2001, Kevin Smith wrote:

[#21514] Re: SV: Re: Ruby/objects book in style of The Little Lisper — Kevin Smith <kevinbsmith@...> 2001/09/22

--- Todd Gillespie <toddg@mail.ma.utexas.edu> wrote:

[#21535] irb — Fabio <fabio.spelta@...>

Hello. :) I'm new here, and I have not found an archive of the previous

15 messages 2001/09/22

[#21616] opening a named pipe? — "Avdi B. Grimm" <avdi@...>

I'm having trouble reading from a named pipe in linux. basicly, I'm

12 messages 2001/09/24

[#21685] manipulating "immutable" objects such as Fixnum from within callbacks & al... — Guillaume Cottenceau <gc@...>

Hello,

15 messages 2001/09/25

[#21798] Ruby internal (guide to the source) — "Benoit Cerrina" <benoit.cerrina@...>

Hi,

22 messages 2001/09/28

[ruby-talk:21190] Re: ANNOUNCE: RIGS 0.1.0 - Ruby Interface to GNUstep

From: "Avdi B.Grimm" <avdi@...>
Date: 2001-09-14 01:47:34 UTC
List: ruby-talk #21190
Anyone here want to talk about experiences programming in the 
NextStep/GNUStep/Cocoa environment? I've heard a lot of people raving about 
what a productive environment it was/is; but I've never seen any specifics or 
code samples.  I've heard that it's main strength is a terrific OO 
application framework. So, what's so wonderful about the API? How does it 
compare to other application frameworks like GNOME, KDE, or MFC?

always eager to try out something new and nifty (or old and nifty),

-Avdi Grimm

On Thursday 13 September 2001 06:34 am, you wrote:
> What is RIGS ?
> ==============
>
> RIGS stands for Ruby Interface for GNUstep. It is a package allowing
> integration between Ruby and Objective-C/GNUstep. The main purpose of
> RIGS is to allow the use the GNUstep development environment from
> Ruby.
>
> One of the most interesting feature of RIGS is that it is 100%
> dynamic. It means that RIGS maps Ruby object/methods to GNUstep and
> vice/versa entirely on the fly when running the Ruby script. As a
> consequence there is no need to generate any kind of wrapping code to
> use either existing GNUstep classes or even new ones that you have
> developped by yourself. Simply compile your new classes in a shared
> library and then do a simple:
>
> require('MyNewClass')       # load your extra ObjC shared library
> Rigs.import("MyNewClass")   # dynamically import the class in Ruby
>
> and you are in business! Cool, hey.
>
> RIGS allows you to write optimized classes and components in
> Objective-C, and make them available to Ruby developers. Ruby is a
> great OO programming language and it is real fun to write GNUstep
> applications directly from Ruby.
>
> By the way GNUstep users who doesn't known Ruby can learn more at
> http://www.ruby-lang.org. And Ruby users that doesn't know about
> GNUstep can go to http://www.gnustep.org. In both cases, it's
> definitely worth a visit.
>
> RIGS is free software and part of the GNU/GNUstep project, freely
> available from the Free Software Foundation under the GNU LGPL
> license. (Some sample Ruby scripts are under GPL)
>
> Disclaimer
> ==========
>
> CAUTION!! This is very alpha software. It is still work in progress
> both because the project is just starting and because I'm new to
> GNUstep and I'm learning as I go. However you can already play with
> it, report problems and contribute new code. (See the Examples and
> Testing directories for code samples). For known limitations see the
> TODO file.
>
> RIGS is very similar in spirit to JIGS, the remarkable Java to GNUstep
> interface written by Nicola Pero. However, unlike JIGS, RIGS doesn't
> focus on accessing Ruby classes from Objective C.
>
> Authors
> =======
>
> RIGS was brought to you by Laurent Julliard
> <laurent@julliard-online.org>
> and was built in my spare time when my 3 children are in bed :-))
>
> Maintainers
> ===========
>
> Laurent Julliard <laurent@julliard-online.org> is on duty!
> Helpers welcome
>
>
> Software Needed to Use RIGS
> ===========================
>
> To use the RIGS, you need:
>
>   * A version of the Objective-C runtime library compiled as a shared
>   library (and working with GNUstep).  Please refer to the INSTALL
>   file for more information on how to compile and install it.
>
>   * GNUstep make package and base library.
>
>   * A properly installed ruby environment version 1.6.4 or higher
>
> Special Thanks
> ==============
>
> To Avi Bryant (avi@beta4.com> who wrote the very first version of this
> version. I took it as a game and then I got trapped! (Thanks Avi...)
>
> To Nicola Pero <n.pero@mi.flashnet.it> for writing JIGS, the brilliant
> Java Interface to GNUstep. JIGS has been (and still is) a constant
> source of inspiration for RIGS.
>
> To Tom White <tom@media.mit.edu> for testing RIGS on GNUstep for
> Windows and on MAC OS X.
>
>
> Obtaining RIGS
> ==============
>
> RIGS is available at ftp://ftp.gnustep.org/pub/gnustep/libs/
>
> New releases are posted on the GNUstep mailing lists (see
> https://savannah.gnu.org/mail/?group_id=99) as well as ruby mailing
> lists.
>
> You may always get the latest version of RIGS from the GNUstep CVS -
> the module is called 'ruby'. Instructions to checkout a working copy
> are available at https://savannah.gnu.org/cvs/?group_id=99
>
> Bug Reports
> ===========
>
> The best way to submit bug reports and fixes is to email them to
> <laurent@julliard-online.org>.
>
>
>
> Laurent Julliard

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