[#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.

=== 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

=== 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+Configuration.

(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="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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