[#2617] irb for 1.5.x — Andrew Hunt <Andy@...>
5 messages
2000/05/03
[#2639] OT: Japanese names — Dave Thomas <Dave@...>
4 messages
2000/05/09
[#2643] Ruby Toplevel — Dave Thomas <Dave@...>
7 messages
2000/05/09
[#2656] Re: Append alias for Array.append? — Aleksi Niemel<aleksi.niemela@...>
Hideto ISHIBASHI:
5 messages
2000/05/09
[#2660] win OLE / eRuby — Andrew Hunt <Andy@...>
8 messages
2000/05/09
[#2663] Re: win OLE / eRuby — Aleksi Niemel<aleksi.niemela@...>
>At Tue, 9 May 2000 09:14:51 -0400,
4 messages
2000/05/09
[#2667] The reference manual is now online — Dave Thomas <Dave@...>
6 messages
2000/05/09
[#2668] Re: The reference manual is now online — schneik@...
4 messages
2000/05/09
[#2702] Re: Append alias for Array.append? — Andrew Hunt <andy@...>
>From: Aleksi Niemel<aleksi.niemela@cinnober.com>
7 messages
2000/05/10
[#2752] RE: Array.pop and documentation [was: Append al ias for Array.append?] — Aleksi Niemel<aleksi.niemela@...>
6 messages
2000/05/11
[#2758] Re: irb install — Andrew Hunt <andy@...>
>|Excellent! Will you consider adding mod_ruby to install_app as
7 messages
2000/05/11
[#2777] Re: irb install
— "NAKAMURA, Hiroshi" <nakahiro@...>
2000/05/12
Hi,
[#2764] More code browsing questions — Albert Wagner <alwagner@...>
I see some class definitions contain "include" and "extend" statements.
6 messages
2000/05/12
[#2843] Re: editors for ruby — "Conrad Schneiker" <schneiker@...>
(Posted on comp.lang.ruby and ruby-talk ML.)
6 messages
2000/05/17
[#2874] RE: simple httpd for local use — Aleksi Niemel<aleksi.niemela@...>
> I personally use it for access to full-text indexed linux
6 messages
2000/05/18
[#2875] Re: simple httpd for local use
— hipster <hipster@...4all.nl>
2000/05/18
On Thu, 18 May 2000 09:10:28 +0200, Aleksi Niemelwrote:
[#2920] SWIG: virtual variable? — Yasushi Shoji <yashi@...>
hello,
4 messages
2000/05/22
[#2928] FYI: What our Python friends are up to. — "Conrad Schneiker" <schneiker@...>
Hi,
8 messages
2000/05/22
[#2964] Thank you — h.fulton@...
Thanks, Matz (and others) for your replies to
4 messages
2000/05/24
[#2973] Re: Socket.getnameinfo — ts <decoux@...>
>>>>> "D" == Dave Thomas <Dave@thomases.com> writes:
10 messages
2000/05/25
[#3016] rbconfig.rb — Dave Thomas <Dave@...>
5 messages
2000/05/28
[#3039] Re: Final for World Series: Python vs Ruby — "Dat Nguyen" <thucdat@...>
1 message
2000/05/30
[#3058] FailureClass? — Aleksi Niemel<aleksi.niemela@...>
Question arising from the FAQ:
7 messages
2000/05/31
[ruby-talk:03018] Re: mismatched quotation
From:
"Hal E. Fulton" <hfulton@...>
Date:
2000-05-29 00:20:28 UTC
List:
ruby-talk #3018
Dave, 1,200 code samples staggers my imagination. Yes, that is a very valid reason for doing one's own typesetting. I do hope they're paying you a bit extra... ;) Good luck with it (to both of you). I look forward to the finished product, though probably not as much as you do. Hal ----- Original Message ----- From: Dave Thomas <Dave@thomases.com> To: ruby-talk ML <ruby-talk@netlab.co.jp> Sent: Saturday, May 27, 2000 8:32 PM Subject: [ruby-talk:03014] Re: mismatched quotation > "Hal E. Fulton" <hfulton@austin.rr.com> writes: > > > That's fine, but it does bother me a little that typesetting > > (traditionally the publisher's job) is being done by authors now > > just because they have better tools than they used to. > > Well, one of the reasons for typesetting your own technical books is > the accuracy of code samples. > > The Ruby book we're writing currently has over 1,200 code samples in > the text. Traditionally, we'd have supplied the publisher with each on > a separate sheet of paper, with a reference number tying it back to > the place it belongs in the source. The code would then be manually > entered, and we'd have to scan each, again manually, for any errors. > > However, typeset the book ourselves, and we have other options. In our > case, the code sits inline in the source of the book. Every time we > format the book, the code gets executed. In many cases, the output is > then inserted back in to the book. During the production of the book, > these code samples have found bugs in Ruby, and fixes to Ruby have > found bugs in the code samples. > > The expected result for us is a more accurate book. > > > Now, to talk about something more on-topic... :) > > > > I have recently discovered that things that I thought were "reserved > > words" can actually serve as method names and the like. > > > > This shocked me. It doesn't really bother me, but it surprised me. > > > > For example, I used a method named "class" and it worked fine. > > Ruby actually has a method 'class' in object: > > p 1.class # => Fixnum > > In terms of how it works: In this case, the use of 'class' as a method > name is unambiguous, so it says "go for it". In fact, the parser > actually makes a special case of just this, casting the reserved word > into an ID for the occasion. > > Regards > > > Dave >