Hi That is fine in this case, can you tell me, in cases where I can't fall back on a ruby class, is there a way to call an overloaded constructor? Your reply makes me worry a bit more.
Thanks, Patrick On Thu, Nov 12, 2009 at 7:11 PM, Ivan Porto Carrero <i...@flanders.co.nz>wrote: > But you can just use the ruby way and that is a lot less noisy > > for a local time > > Time.local 2009, 9, 28 > http://ruby-doc.org/core/classes/Time.html#M000254 > > for utc > Time.utc 2009, 9, 29 > http://ruby-doc.org/core/classes/Time.html#M000252 > > It still creates a System::DateTime underneath > > --- > Met vriendelijke groeten - Best regards - Salutations > Ivan Porto Carrero > Blog: http://flanders.co.nz > Google Wave: portocarrero.i...@googlewave.com > Twitter: http://twitter.com/casualjim > Author of IronRuby in Action (http://manning.com/carrero) > > > > On Fri, Nov 13, 2009 at 12:49 AM, Patrick Brown > <patrickcbr...@gmail.com>wrote: > >> Hi >> >> Is there a way for me to call an overloaded constructor?? I want >> to say date = new DateTime(2009,9,28) using IronRuby 0.9.2. I have been >> searching quite a bit and haven't seen anything so far. >> >> Thank you, >> Patrick >> >> _______________________________________________ >> Ironruby-core mailing list >> Ironruby-core@rubyforge.org >> http://rubyforge.org/mailman/listinfo/ironruby-core >> >> > > _______________________________________________ > Ironruby-core mailing list > Ironruby-core@rubyforge.org > http://rubyforge.org/mailman/listinfo/ironruby-core > >
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