[#389739] Ruby Challenge — teresa nuagen <unguyen90@...>

Here is a ruby challenge for all you computer science lovers out there,

22 messages 2011/11/05
[#389769] Re: Ruby Challenge — "Jonan S." <jonanscheffler@...> 2011/11/05

Totally unrelated to any husker computer science programs right? Like

[#389905] Re: Ruby Challenge — Stephen Ramsay <sramsay.unl@...> 2011/11/09

Jonan S. wrote in post #1030330:

[#389907] Re: Ruby Challenge — aseret nuagen <unguyen90@...> 2011/11/09

> You mean like the professor for the course? Because that would be me .

[#389915] Re: Ruby Challenge — Robert Klemme <shortcutter@...> 2011/11/09

On Wed, Nov 9, 2011 at 4:52 AM, aseret nuagen <unguyen90@aim.com> wrote:

[#389792] Tricky DSL, how to do it? — Intransition <transfire@...>

I'd want to write a DSL such that a surface method_missing catches

18 messages 2011/11/06

[#389858] Compiling Ruby Inline C code - resolving errors — Martin Hansen <mail@...>

I am trying to get this Ruby inline C code http://pastie.org/2825882 to

12 messages 2011/11/08

[#389928] Forming a Ruby meetup group... — "Darryl L. Pierce" <mcpierce@...>

Where I work we have a local Ruby group that used to meet up, until the

12 messages 2011/11/09

[#389950] The faster way to read files — "Noé Alejandro" <casanejo@...>

Does anybody know which is the fastest way to read a file? Lets say

18 messages 2011/11/09

[#390064] referring to version numbers in a gem — Chad Perrin <code@...>

How do I specify and access a gem's version number within the code of the

28 messages 2011/11/11

[#390238] RVM problem, plz help — Misha Ognev <b1368810@...>

Hi, I have this problem:

15 messages 2011/11/16

[#390308] any command line tools for querying yaml files — Rahul Kumar <sentinel1879@...>

(Sorry, this is not exactly a ruby question).

11 messages 2011/11/18

[#390338] Newbie - cmd question — Otto Dydakt <ottodydakt@...>

I've literally JUST downloaded ruby from rubyinstaller.org.

21 messages 2011/11/19
[#390342] Re: Newbie - cmd question — Otto Dydakt <ottodydakt@...> 2011/11/19

OK thank you, I uninstalled & reinstalled, checking the three boxes at

[#390343] Re: Newbie - cmd question — "Ian M. Asaff" <ian.asaff@...> 2011/11/19

did you type "irb" first to bring up the ruby command prompt?

[#391154] Re: Newbie - cmd question — "Hussain A." <hahmad@...> 2011/12/12

Hi all,

[#391165] Re: Newbie - cmd question — Luis Lavena <luislavena@...> 2011/12/12

Hussain A. wrote in post #1036281:

[#390374] Principle of Best Principles — Intransition <transfire@...>

I seem to run into a couple of design issue a lot and I never know what is

16 messages 2011/11/20

[#390396] how to call Function argument into another ruby script. — hari mahesh <harismahesh@...>

Consider I have a ruby file called library.rb.

10 messages 2011/11/21

[#390496] How to make 1.9.2 my default version using RVM — Fily Salas <fs_tigre@...>

Hi,

25 messages 2011/11/24

[#390535] Is high-speed sorting impossible with Ruby? — "Gaurav C." <chande.gaurav@...>

Well, first of all, I'm new to Ruby, and to this forum. So, hello. :)

39 messages 2011/11/25
[#390580] Re: Is high-speed sorting impossible with Ruby? — Joao Pedrosa <joaopedrosa@...> 2011/11/27

Hi,

[#390593] Re: Is high-speed sorting impossible with Ruby? — "Gaurav C." <chande.gaurav@...> 2011/11/27

Joao Pedrosa wrote in post #1033884:

[#390600] Re: Is high-speed sorting impossible with Ruby? — Douglas Seifert <doug@...> 2011/11/27

A big gain can be had by disabling the garbage collector. Here is my best

[#390601] Re: Is high-speed sorting impossible with Ruby? — Douglas Seifert <doug@...> 2011/11/27

I've thrown various solutions up on github here:

[#390650] Loading a faulty ruby file - forcing this — Marc Heiler <shevegen@...>

Hi.

10 messages 2011/11/29

[#390689] Stupid question — James Gallagher <lollyproductions@...>

Hi everyone.

22 messages 2011/11/30

Ruby-GNOME2 moves to GitHub

From: Kouhei Sutou <kou@...>
Date: 2011-11-18 13:00:18 UTC
List: ruby-talk #390306
Hi!

The Ruby-GNOME2 team has been hard at work the last few months to
bring you updates in a wide range of areas.

* Ruby 1.9

Ruby-GNOME2 now compiles and runs without warnings or errors against
both Ruby 1.8 and Ruby 1.9.1 ABIs.  That means that you can use it
with Ruby 1.8.7, 1.9.1, 1.9.2, and 1.9.3.

Support for String encodings in the 1.9 series has also been improved.

Initial investigations into improving concurrency in Ruby 1.9 has also
been made, but will require a lot of work to get done.

* Memory management

A thorough audit of memory allocations has been made and many
potential memory leaks have been plugged.

Garbage collection protection has also been improved, fixing problems
that could previously occur in seemingly random ways.

* Ease of build

The build system has been vastly improved, supporting gem building and
binary gems for Windows.

* Ease of documentation

A new documentation system based on YARD has been implemented and is
currently being applied.  This will improve both the documentation
quality and its accessibility.

* Ease of definition of new interfaces

The process of linking C functions to Ruby methods has been
simplified.  This makes both documentation and interfaces easier to
write and keep in sync.

* Bug removal

As a result of other changes, a large portion of the source code has
been thoroughly reviewed and updated, with quite a few bugs being
removed.

* Gtk+ 3 support

Support for Gtk+ 3 is currently being implemented.  This is a sizable
task and will require a lot of work.  Gtk+ 3 is, however, the future
and the Gtk+ 2 is now in maintenance mode.

* GitHub hosting

Ruby-GNOME2 is now hosted on GitHub and the Git repository is the main
repository.  The Subversion repository has been closed.

The Ruby-GNOME2 repository can thus now be found at

https://github.com/ruby-gnome2/ruby-gnome2

* GObject-introspection

Initial investigations into using GObject-introspection have begun.
This is another sizable task that will require a lot of work, but
promises huge winnings.

* Contributing

We are quite pleased with the progress that we're making, but we could
really use a few extra hands.  The areas that we particularly want to
improve is documentation, Ruby 1.9, and Gtk+ 3.  So fork us on GitHub
and begin submitting your pull requests!


Thanks,
--
kou

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