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.
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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 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
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
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
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?
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[email protected]
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