Project
Reverse Dependencies for hoe
The projects listed here declare hoe as a runtime or development dependency
0.0
This gem adds the `decode_www_form_component` method to .
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the Decorator make a decorator like Python.
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Tasks to switch your Rails database configuration for a single Rake
run. Useful when you're targeting more than one database engine.
I use this for Rails, but it should work in any framework that uses
a config/database.yml file.
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Macros for ruby
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defstr converts text to a C string literal that parses (by a C compiler) to the original text, and creates a C macro that defines it as a constant. The liternal preserves the original text's structure (line breaks, paragraphs, etc). defstr can be used as a tool for C/C++ code generation.
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Demeter is back with a vengeance. Prevent your models from violating his sacred law and you shall be spared.
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FIX (describe your package)
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Open Drug Database for Germany. Live at http://de.oddb.org
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YAML based deployment framework for your code.
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FIX (describe your package)
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Deprecatable is a library to help you, as a developer, deprecate your API and be
proactive about helping people who use your library find where they need to
update.
When using Deprecatable, you mark methods as 'deperecated' and then the users of
your API will receive a helpful alert showing the exact line of code where they
called the deprecated API, and what they need to do to fix it (although you need
to supply this piece of information).
Users will receive, by default, a single alert for each unique location a
deprecated API method is invoked. They will also receive a final report
detailing all the locations where deprecated APIs were invoked.
The "noisiness" of the alerting and the final report is all configurable, via
both code, and environment variables. See Deprecatable::Options.
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The dep_walker is small utility gem that checks dependencies for native extensions
used by installed gems on Windows. If you are {RubyInstaller}[http://www.rubyinstaller.org]
user and have seen message box:
<em>"This application has failed to start because <name_of_dll>.dll was not found.
Re-installing the application may fix this problem"</em>
when you tried to use gem that has pre-built binariy extension, you've faced common
problem on Windows systems - missing dependency dll. Same error might occur even if
extension library was built during gem installation if all header files and libraries
are available to the build tools, but runtime dependencies are not present.
With dep_walker you can simply check all installed gems. Even more, if log is turned on,
gem will print out information where dependency is found on the system, so you can check
whether Ruby extension really uses correct version of required dll.
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Derailer is a small program built out of a peculiar need. It started as a script
to publish content generated using a Ruby on Rails application without actually
running the application on the server. An over-enthusiastic Rails developer once
made a quick site for a friend using a database and Rails simply because it was
easier than hand-coding anything else, but didn't really think about the number
of resources it would consume. Thus, derailer was born.
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Client library for the Central Authentication Service (CAS) protocol.
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Spam detection plugin for Rails 2 & ActiveRecord 2. Uses all the standard Rails conventions and
my Despamilator gem. Use the main (non rails2) version for Rails 3.
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The DevCreek gem enables programmers to collect and transmit metrics from their Ruby Test::Unit and RSpec test suites to a DevCreek server. Please visit the DevCreek site (http://devcreek.com/index.html) for more info. == FEATURES/PROBLEMS: Supported frameworks include Test::Unit and RSpec (> 1.10). == SYNOPSIS: The DevCreek Ruby Gem is library that, when loaded, will automatically listen to and collect metrics from your Test::Unit/RSpec unit tests. All you have to do is load the DevCreek library in your code and give it your DevCreek account info so that it can transmit the metrics to the server. Here is the simplest example of how to load DevCreek: -------- #Load the devcreek gem require 'rubygems' require 'devcreek' #set your account info DevCreek::Core.instance().load_from_yaml("#{ENV['HOME']}/.yoursettingsfile.devcreek.yml") -------- There are two ways to provide DevCreek with your account settings. The first (as shown above) is to point DevCreek to a settings file. The 'enabled' attribute tells devcreek whether or not it should actually transmit the metrics that it collects. The yaml file would like this: -------- user: your_devcreek_username password: your_devcreek_password project: your_devcreek_project enabled: true -------- The other way to provide DevCreek with your settings is via a hash. So, instead of loading a yaml file, you could do this: -------- #Load the devcreek gem require 'rubygems' require 'devcreek' #set your account info DevCreek::Core.instance().load( :user => 'your_devcreek_username', :password => 'your_devcreek_password', :project => 'your_devcreek_project', :enabled => true ) -------- The first method is preferrable because it allows you to keep your account settings outside of your project (and therefore your source control tool). If you only have 1 test file, you can place the code to load devcreek in the test file and your done. However, most projects will have many test files. In this case, you need to make sure that the Ruby interpreter loads devcreek before running the test classes. This can be done via the Ruby '-r' option. For example, assuming your code to load devcreek is in a file called foo.rb, you would run your tests from the command line like this: ruby -r foo.rb test/test_* If you run your tests from a Rakefile, then you need to tell rake to include the -r option when it runs the tests (rake runs it's tests in a separate Ruby process). You can do this pretty easily in your Rakefile, like so; -------- require 'rake/testtask' Rake::TestTask.new('all_tests') do |t| t.ruby_opts = ['-r foo.rb'] t.test_files = ['test/test_*.rb'] end --------
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Ruby implementation of null file (like /dev/null on Un*x, NUL on Windows)
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== DESCRIPTION:
The RightScale AWS gems have been designed to provide a robust, fast, and secure interface to Amazon EC2, EBS, S3, SQS, SDB, and CloudFront.
These gems have been used in production by RightScale since late 2006 and are being maintained to track enhancements made by Amazon.
The RightScale AWS gems comprise:
- RightAws::Ec2 -- interface to Amazon EC2 (Elastic Compute Cloud) and the
associated EBS (Elastic Block Store)
- RightAws::S3 and RightAws::S3Interface -- interface to Amazon S3 (Simple Storage Service)
- RightAws::Sqs and RightAws::SqsInterface -- interface to first-generation Amazon SQS (Simple Queue Service) (API version 2007-05-01)
- RightAws::SqsGen2 and RightAws::SqsGen2Interface -- interface to second-generation Amazon SQS (Simple Queue Service) (API version 2008-01-01)
- RightAws::SdbInterface and RightAws::ActiveSdb -- interface to Amazon SDB (SimpleDB)
- RightAws::AcfInterface -- interface to Amazon CloudFront, a content distribution service
== FEATURES:
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Macros for ruby
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ruby wrapper for digg api
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