Oh nice, didn't know about that. 

-- 
Dominic Graefen
Freelance: Interactive Developer / Creative Technologist
devboy.org (http://devboy.org)


On Thursday, October 6, 2011 at 1:54 PM, Alex Boisvert wrote:

> You can override the location of a project by passing the :base_dir option
> during project definition,
> 
> define :foo, :base_dir => 'somewhere/else' do
>  p "base dir is " + project.base_dir
> end
> 
> alex
> 
> On Thu, Oct 6, 2011 at 2:42 AM, Sprog : Weyert de Boer <[email protected] 
> (mailto:[email protected])>wrote:
> 
> > Hello,
> > 
> > I am currently experimenting with Buildr in combination with Buildr-AS3.
> > Only I am having some issues with Buildr because of our corporate policy.
> > In our policy is outlined how a project should be structured. Every project
> > has the following structure:
> > 
> >  E:\[project_name]
> >  - workspace (Eclipse project folder)
> > 
> > Now if you have submodules then these are considered as a normal project.
> > Only the way Buildr works is that it expects subprojects to be a child
> > directory of the main project. What's the best way to solve this problem? As
> > temporary solution I moved the project to my personal computer and put all
> > the subdirectories into the main project. But I would like to be able to do
> > this at work. How can I do this? Using ../../my_subproject didn't work as
> > project name
> > 
> > My last question for today is how can I get rid of the *.pom files that
> > Buildr (or Buildr-AS3) creates? I don't need those files...
> > 
> > Thanks for your help!
> > 
> > --
> > [Beep]
> > 
> > --
> > Sprog : Weyert de Boer
> > Flash Designer/ Developer : Nothing
> > [email protected] (mailto:[email protected]) : www.nothing.ch 
> > (http://www.nothing.ch)
> > 
> > Fon +41 31 384 10 10
> > Fax +41 31 384 10 40

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