You're welcome. I've looked into adding global hot keys before, but
never too seriously, so I definitely learned a few things as well.
As for the problem with aixmlserialize, I wouldn't assume that it is a
32/64-bit issue. In this case, it was obvious what was going on from
the documentation. Ge
Hi Łukasz,
Since the bark method is defined in Ruby, it means its return value
and arguments are objects (id). So, if you want to call the method
from Objective-C, you must pass an Objective-C object. In this case,
an NSNumber object should do it.
If the bark method was actually an Objective-C me
ERB is part of Ruby's core library, and as such, is included with
MacRuby. I just poked around in macirb 0.4 and it seems to be working
as expected.
Best,
Jeremy
On Thu, May 21, 2009 at 2:57 AM, Mic Pringle wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Is Erb included in 0.4 MacRuby ... and if so is it fully functional ?
>
My question boils down to a simpler case:
Ruby:
class Dog
def bark(num = 1)
num.times { puts "woof!" }
end
end
Objective-C:
id dog = [[MacRuby sharedRuntime] evaluateString:@"Dog.new"];
[dog bark:3];
Passing Objective-C int to a Ruby method crashes it.
Assumin
Hi,
Is Erb included in 0.4 MacRuby ... and if so is it fully functional ?
Thanks,
-Mic
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