There is a tutorial on the site about submitting more tutorials. Basically you
fork the repo, add some content and send a pull request.
- Matt
Sent from my iPhone
On Mar 4, 2011, at 9:48, Martin Hawkins wrote:
> So - how to proceed?
> I think the best place to publish would be the documentati
So - how to proceed?
I think the best place to publish would be the documentation page on
the MacRuby site.
Are there publication guidelines? Specific tools that need to be used?
Who 'owns' the site?
___
MacRuby-devel mailing list
[email protected]
I think that would be awesome!
- Matt
Sent from my iPhone
On Mar 4, 2011, at 5:13, Martin Hawkins wrote:
> Is it something that would be of interest to people? If so, I would be
> willing to get involved.
>
> On 4 March 2011 09:57, Matt Aimonetti wrote:
> Not really, the only other thing is
Ideally every gem (or nearly every gem) that works with Ruby 1.9 should work
with MacRuby. Browsing the homepage at
http://mechanize.rubyforge.org/mechanize/ it appears that Mechanize is still
tied to Ruby 1.8.7. However, if you can get it working with Ruby 1.9.2 and
it still doesn't work with MacR
Is it something that would be of interest to people? If so, I would be
willing to get involved.
On 4 March 2011 09:57, Matt Aimonetti wrote:
> Not really, the only other thing is the free online version of my book:
> http://ofps.oreilly.com/titles/9781449380373/
>
> - Matt
>
> On Fri, Mar 4, 201
Not really, the only other thing is the free online version of my book:
http://ofps.oreilly.com/titles/9781449380373/
- Matt
On Fri, Mar 4, 2011 at 1:49 AM, Martin Hawkins wrote:
> Is there an 'official' macruby documentation site? (Apart from the
> MacRuby Documentation page)
> It strikes me th
Is there an 'official' macruby documentation site? (Apart from the
MacRuby Documentation page)
It strikes me that there is a ton of gold dust in this forum that
really needs to be pulled together so that people can access it
easily.
___
MacRuby-devel mail