[#393742] Getting the class of an object. — Ralph Shnelvar <ralphs@...32.com>

Consider;

14 messages 2012/03/06

[#393815] arcadia IDE requires tcl/tk and ruby-tk — Thufir Hawat <hawat.thufir@...>

which or where tcl and tk does arcadia require? Is this a gem which I

13 messages 2012/03/13

[#393952] What’s the best way to check if a feature/class has been loaded? — Nikolai Weibull <now@...>

Hi!

18 messages 2012/03/21
[#393953] Re: What’s the best way to check if a feature/class has been loaded? — Xavier Noria <fxn@...> 2012/03/21

Active Support has recently added qualified_const_* methods to Module

[#393954] Re: What’s the best way to check if a feature/class has been loaded? — Xavier Noria <fxn@...> 2012/03/21

Ah, that won't work in 1.8.

[#393959] Re: What’s the best way to check if a feature/class has been loaded? — Nikolai Weibull <now@...> 2012/03/21

On Wed, Mar 21, 2012 at 16:43, Xavier Noria <fxn@hashref.com> wrote:

[#393960] Re: What’s the best way to check if a feature/class has been loaded? — Xavier Noria <fxn@...> 2012/03/21

On Wed, Mar 21, 2012 at 8:17 PM, Nikolai Weibull <now@bitwi.se> wrote:

[#393961] Re: What’s the best way to check if a feature/class has been loaded? — Nikolai Weibull <now@...> 2012/03/21

On Wed, Mar 21, 2012 at 20:48, Xavier Noria <fxn@hashref.com> wrote:

[#393962] Re: What’s the best way to check if a feature/class has been loaded? — Xavier Noria <fxn@...> 2012/03/21

On Wed, Mar 21, 2012 at 9:51 PM, Nikolai Weibull <now@bitwi.se> wrote:

[#393967] Re: What’s the best way to check if a feature/class has been loaded? — Nikolai Weibull <now@...> 2012/03/22

On Wed, Mar 21, 2012 at 22:11, Xavier Noria <fxn@hashref.com> wrote:

[#393969] Re: What’s the best way to check if a feature/class has been loaded? — Xavier Noria <fxn@...> 2012/03/22

On Thu, Mar 22, 2012 at 6:15 AM, Nikolai Weibull <now@bitwi.se> wrote:

[#394154] uninitialized constant SOCKSSocket — Resident Moron <lists@...>

I am running ruby 1.9.3 on a linux box. I would like to use

10 messages 2012/03/29

[#394160] Why z = Complex(1,2) rather than z = Complex.new(1,2)? — Ori Ben-Dor <lists@...>

What's this syntax, z = Complex(1,2), as opposed to z =

14 messages 2012/03/29

[#394175] shoes no such file to load -- rubygems — Mr theperson <lists@...>

I have installed shoes to develop GUI applications but when I try and

13 messages 2012/03/29

[#394201] Can't open url with a subdomain with an underscore — Jeroen van Ingen <lists@...>

I try to open the following URL: http://auto_diversen.marktplaza.nl/

10 messages 2012/03/30

[#394222] Ruby openssl ECC help plz — no name <lists@...>

I am confused on how to properly export public ECC key. I can see it

13 messages 2012/03/31

[ANN] hoe-travis 1.0 Released

From: Eric Hodel <drbrain@...7.net>
Date: 2012-03-02 00:46:28 UTC
List: ruby-talk #393702
* https://github.com/drbrain/hoe-travis
* http://docs.seattlerb.org/hoe-travis

hoe-travis is a Hoe plugin that allows your gem to gain maximum benefit =
from
http://travis-ci.org.  The plugin contains a .travis.yml generator and a
pre-defined rake task which runs the tests and ensures your manifest =
file is correct.

With hoe-travis it is easy to add additional checks.  Custom checks can =
be
easily verified locally by simply running a rake task instead of =
committing
and pushing a change, waiting for travis to run your tests, then trying =
a new
commit if you didn't fix the problem.

=3D=3D=3D Features

* .travis.yml generation task
* Pre-defined rake tasks which are run by travis-ci
* Easy to hook up rake tasks for additional travis-ci setup or checks

=3D=3D=3D Getting Started

If you're not already using Hoe with your project, see: =
http://docs.seattlerb.org/hoe/Hoe.pdf

To get started with hoe-travis, first install it:

  sudo gem install hoe-travis

Then add hoe-travis as a plugin to your Rakefile:

  Hoe.plugin :travis

Then generate a .travis.yml

  $ rake travis:generate

This will bring up your EDITOR with your travis.yml for any desired =
tweaks.
Save the file when you're done, then check in your .travis.yml.  For =
further
details of how the configuration is generated see =
http://docs.seattlerb.org/hoe-travis/Hoe/Travis.html#label-Setup and
=
http://docs.seattlerb.org/hoe-travis/Hoe/Travis.html#label-Hoe+Configurati=
on.

(If you don't have the EDITOR environment variable set to your favorite
editor, please do so.  Note that some editors may need extra flags to =
wait for
files to be edited.  For MacVIM, `export EDITOR=3D"mvim
--remote-wait"` will wait for the file to be closed before returning.)

If you would like to make future changes to your .travis.yml you can =
run:

  $ rake travis:edit

Which, like `rake travis:generate`, will bring up your EDITOR with your
.travis.yml.  When you've saved the file the changes will be checked by
travis-lint before writing back to .travis.yml and give you a chance to
correct them.

If you've edited your .travis.yml by hand you can run:

  $ rake travis:check

to check it.

Testing your travis-ci setup is easy with hoe-travis.  You can run:

  $ rake travis

to run the same checks travis-ci will.  By default this includes running =
the
tests and ensuring the Manifest.txt file is complete.  There is also the
before script:

  $ rake travis:before

Which will run the setup tasks needed for your project.

You can also enable and disable travis-ci using `rake
travis:enable` and `rake travis:disable`.  See
http://docs.seattlerb.org/hoe-travis/Hoe/Travis.html#label-Setup for =
details.


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