The main site is more about stable releases, so they tend to have some time
between them.
Lots of the GUI toolkits are simply bindings to things like gtk or kde, so
they're beholden to that schedule.
Others, like Shoes, are under active development, but can be slow sometimes.
I'm the maintainer for Shoes, and I don't exactly have a big team, so while
I'm literally doing some dev right now, we don't put out new releases on a
super-fast schedule.
Thank you for the answers, I am happy to hear that. As to gui toolkit it
means a kit that allows you to make guis. It seems to be the term in any
programming language I have coded in the past, if it has a different
name id love to know to correct my miss understanding.
Ruby comes with tk build in. While your investigating which toolkits
are right for your project that on is distributed with the language to
play with right off the bat.
~Stu
···
On Sat, May 7, 2011 at 11:17 AM, Bobby S. <kajisakka@gmail.com> wrote:
Is ruby still being developed? The official site has last release in dec
2010.
The other thing is are any of the GUI toolkits still being developed.
Most of them date back to 2009 or later.
I love ruby but I went looking for a GUI toolkit today and found no
active ones then I started looking at ruby for the reason and now I am
worried.
Python 2.7.1 was released on November 27th, 2010
Perl 5.12.3 was released on January 22nd, 2011
Java saw its last release in April to work with new versions of IE and
Chrome, something Ruby doesn't have to contend with.
Anyone questioning whether any of those are still being developed?
(well, maybe Perl... ;p)
I'm using Ruby 1.8.7 and it does not contain TK...
ie, in irb: 'require TK' returns error 'no such file to load...'
···
----- Original Message ----- From: "Stu" <stu@rubyprogrammer.net>
To: "ruby-talk ML" <ruby-talk@ruby-lang.org>
Sent: Saturday, May 07, 2011 4:31 PM
Subject: Re: Ruby Activity
Ruby comes with tk build in. While your investigating which toolkits
are right for your project that on is distributed with the language to
play with right off the bat.
~Stu
On Sat, May 7, 2011 at 11:17 AM, Bobby S. <kajisakka@gmail.com> wrote:
Is ruby still being developed? The official site has last release in dec
2010.
The other thing is are any of the GUI toolkits still being developed.
Most of them date back to 2009 or later.
I love ruby but I went looking for a GUI toolkit today and found no
active ones then I started looking at ruby for the reason and now I am
worried.
As to gui toolkit it
means a kit that allows you to make guis. It seems to be the term in any
programming language I have coded in the past, if it has a different
name id love to know to correct my miss understanding.
I'm using Ruby 1.8.7 and it does not contain TK...
ie, in irb: 'require TK' returns error 'no such file to load...'
It's actually not built into the RubyInstaller Windows versions. Maybe
there are other distributions that it's not built into either. (You
can install Tcl/Tk yourself and then use the tk_as_gem gem to get it.)
···
On Tue, May 10, 2011 at 2:46 PM, Patrick Lynch <kmandpjlynch@verizon.net> wrote:
----- Original Message ----- From: "Stu" <stu@rubyprogrammer.net>
To: "ruby-talk ML" <ruby-talk@ruby-lang.org>
Sent: Saturday, May 07, 2011 4:31 PM
Subject: Re: Ruby Activity
Ruby comes with tk build in. While your investigating which toolkits
are right for your project that on is distributed with the language to
play with right off the bat.
~Stu
On Sat, May 7, 2011 at 11:17 AM, Bobby S. <kajisakka@gmail.com> wrote:
Is ruby still being developed? The official site has last release in dec
2010.
The other thing is are any of the GUI toolkits still being developed.
Most of them date back to 2009 or later.
I love ruby but I went looking for a GUI toolkit today and found no
active ones then I started looking at ruby for the reason and now I am
worried.
It's something you enable when you compile it. It's optional based on
different user needs. For example if you where to use ruby on a
embedded system you may not need the extra space taken up by tk or
rdoc so you remove it and slim down the install.
For example on FreeBSD you enable the flag tk when running make install.
On Gentoo you add the use flag tk for it to build with it.
Darwin refers to them as variants to help with OS conflicts here is an
example output from a mac for 1.8.7:
% port variants ruby
ruby has the variants:
mactk: enable MacTk (Tk.framework without X11) support
* conflicts with tk
no_doc: do not install rdoc documents
[+]thread_hooks: apply Apple's thread_hooks patch
tk: enable tk support
* conflicts with mactk
universal: Build for multiple architectures
1.9:
% port variants ruby19
ruby19 has the variants:
c_api_docs: Generate documentation for Ruby C API
mactk: Build using Mac OS X Tk Framework
* conflicts with tk
nosuffix: Don't add the 1.9 program suffix to the executables. Note: that
makes the port conflict with ruby (1.8), rb-rubygems, and rb-rake
ports.
tk: Build using MacPorts Tk
* conflicts with mactk
universal: Build for multiple architectures
···
~
On Tue, May 10, 2011 at 2:46 PM, Patrick Lynch <kmandpjlynch@verizon.net> wrote:
I'm using Ruby 1.8.7 and it does not contain TK...
ie, in irb: 'require TK' returns error 'no such file to load...'
----- Original Message ----- From: "Stu" <stu@rubyprogrammer.net>
To: "ruby-talk ML" <ruby-talk@ruby-lang.org>
Sent: Saturday, May 07, 2011 4:31 PM
Subject: Re: Ruby Activity
Ruby comes with tk build in. While your investigating which toolkits
are right for your project that on is distributed with the language to
play with right off the bat.
~Stu
On Sat, May 7, 2011 at 11:17 AM, Bobby S. <kajisakka@gmail.com> wrote:
Is ruby still being developed? The official site has last release in dec
2010.
The other thing is are any of the GUI toolkits still being developed.
Most of them date back to 2009 or later.
I love ruby but I went looking for a GUI toolkit today and found no
active ones then I started looking at ruby for the reason and now I am
worried.
I'm actually using a Mac with Snow Leopard...
At the Bash command line: the command tclsh invokes TCL, so it is installed on my machine...
However, in irb: require 'tk' gives an error message...
I'd appreciate any advice...quite frankly, I don't know how to install TCL with Ruby gems...
Thank you
···
----- Original Message ----- From: "Eric Christopherson" <echristopherson@gmail.com>
To: "ruby-talk ML" <ruby-talk@ruby-lang.org>
Sent: Tuesday, May 10, 2011 4:00 PM
Subject: Re: Ruby Activity
On Tue, May 10, 2011 at 2:46 PM, Patrick Lynch <kmandpjlynch@verizon.net> > wrote:
I'm using Ruby 1.8.7 and it does not contain TK...
ie, in irb: 'require TK' returns error 'no such file to load...'
It's actually not built into the RubyInstaller Windows versions. Maybe
there are other distributions that it's not built into either. (You
can install Tcl/Tk yourself and then use the tk_as_gem gem to get it.)
----- Original Message ----- From: "Stu" <stu@rubyprogrammer.net>
To: "ruby-talk ML" <ruby-talk@ruby-lang.org>
Sent: Saturday, May 07, 2011 4:31 PM
Subject: Re: Ruby Activity
Ruby comes with tk build in. While your investigating which toolkits
are right for your project that on is distributed with the language to
play with right off the bat.
~Stu
On Sat, May 7, 2011 at 11:17 AM, Bobby S. <kajisakka@gmail.com> wrote:
Is ruby still being developed? The official site has last release in dec
2010.
The other thing is are any of the GUI toolkits still being developed.
Most of them date back to 2009 or later.
I love ruby but I went looking for a GUI toolkit today and found no
active ones then I started looking at ruby for the reason and now I am
worried.
I'm actually using a Mac with Snow Leopard...
At the Bash command line: the command tclsh invokes TCL, so it is installed
on my machine...
However, in irb: require 'tk' gives an error message...
I'd appreciate any advice...quite frankly, I don't know how to install TCL
with Ruby gems...
If you use macports this is how you enable the variant flag:
% port -v install ruby +tk
or for 1.9.x:
% port -v install ruby19 +tk
rvm will install it as default. There is documentation on the rvm site
for further integration with macports and tk
~Stu
···
On Tue, May 10, 2011 at 8:06 PM, Patrick Lynch <kmandpjlynch@verizon.net> wrote:
Hi,
I'm actually using a Mac with Snow Leopard...
At the Bash command line: the command tclsh invokes TCL, so it is installed
on my machine...
However, in irb: require 'tk' gives an error message...
I'd appreciate any advice...quite frankly, I don't know how to install TCL
with Ruby gems...
Thank you
----- Original Message ----- From: "Eric Christopherson"
<echristopherson@gmail.com>
To: "ruby-talk ML" <ruby-talk@ruby-lang.org>
Sent: Tuesday, May 10, 2011 4:00 PM
Subject: Re: Ruby Activity
On Tue, May 10, 2011 at 2:46 PM, Patrick Lynch <kmandpjlynch@verizon.net> >> wrote:
I'm using Ruby 1.8.7 and it does not contain TK...
ie, in irb: 'require TK' returns error 'no such file to load...'
It's actually not built into the RubyInstaller Windows versions. Maybe
there are other distributions that it's not built into either. (You
can install Tcl/Tk yourself and then use the tk_as_gem gem to get it.)
----- Original Message ----- From: "Stu" <stu@rubyprogrammer.net>
To: "ruby-talk ML" <ruby-talk@ruby-lang.org>
Sent: Saturday, May 07, 2011 4:31 PM
Subject: Re: Ruby Activity
Ruby comes with tk build in. While your investigating which toolkits
are right for your project that on is distributed with the language to
play with right off the bat.
~Stu
On Sat, May 7, 2011 at 11:17 AM, Bobby S. <kajisakka@gmail.com> wrote:
Is ruby still being developed? The official site has last release in
dec
2010.
The other thing is are any of the GUI toolkits still being developed.
Most of them date back to 2009 or later.
I love ruby but I went looking for a GUI toolkit today and found no
active ones then I started looking at ruby for the reason and now I am
worried.
Good morning,
I'm trying to get Git going for version control..
I've got Git 1.7.5 installed on a Mac with Snow Leopard...
Supposedly, the config file is named .gitconfig and it should be in my home directory, according to AWDWR authors...
I did a ls -a .gitconfig in my home directory and in root, but can not find it.
I'd appreaciate any help...
Thank you
On Thu, May 12, 2011 at 7:45 AM, Patrick Lynch <kmandpjlynch@verizon.net> wrote:
I'm trying to get Git going for version control..
I've got Git 1.7.5 installed on a Mac with Snow Leopard...
Supposedly, the config file is named .gitconfig and it should be in my home
directory, according to AWDWR authors...
I did a ls -a .gitconfig in my home directory and in root, but can not find
it.
2011/5/12 Patrick Lynch <kmandpjlynch@verizon.net>:
Good morning,
I'm trying to get Git going for version control..
I've got Git 1.7.5 installed on a Mac with Snow Leopard...
Supposedly, the config file is named .gitconfig and it should be in my home
directory, according to AWDWR authors...
I did a ls -a .gitconfig in my home directory and in root, but can not find
it.
I'd appreaciate any help...
Presumably, it should be in the same directory as the .gitignore file...
One last question, how do you add 'my name' and 'my email address' to this file?
The AWDWR authors indicate that it should look like:
[user]
name = Sam Ruby
email = ruby@interwingly.net
Good day
···
----- Original Message ----- From: "Hassan Schroeder" <hassan.schroeder@gmail.com>
To: "ruby-talk ML" <ruby-talk@ruby-lang.org>
Sent: Thursday, May 12, 2011 11:03 AM
Subject: Re: Git configuration file: .gitconfig
On Thu, May 12, 2011 at 7:45 AM, Patrick Lynch <kmandpjlynch@verizon.net> > wrote:
I'm trying to get Git going for version control..
I've got Git 1.7.5 installed on a Mac with Snow Leopard...
Supposedly, the config file is named .gitconfig and it should be in my home
directory, according to AWDWR authors...
I did a ls -a .gitconfig in my home directory and in root, but can not find
it.
...sorry, I thought Git was the preferred version control manager of Rails and Ruby...
...i'll pose my question elsewhere...
thanks...
···
----- Original Message ----- From: "Iñaki Baz Castillo" <ibc@aliax.net>
To: "ruby-talk ML" <ruby-talk@ruby-lang.org>
Sent: Thursday, May 12, 2011 12:28 PM
Subject: Re: Git configuration file: .gitconfig
2011/5/12 Patrick Lynch <kmandpjlynch@verizon.net>:
Good morning,
I'm trying to get Git going for version control..
I've got Git 1.7.5 installed on a Mac with Snow Leopard...
Supposedly, the config file is named .gitconfig and it should be in my home
directory, according to AWDWR authors...
I did a ls -a .gitconfig in my home directory and in root, but can not find
it.
I'd appreaciate any help...
On Thu, May 12, 2011 at 5:19 PM, Patrick Lynch <kmandpjlynch@verizon.net> wrote:
Presumably, it should be in the same directory as the .gitignore file...
One last question, how do you add 'my name' and 'my email address' to this
file?
The AWDWR authors indicate that it should look like:
[user]
name = Sam Ruby
email = ruby@interwingly.net
RTFM. Or at least a git tutorial one site over on github.
···
On Thu, May 12, 2011 at 5:19 PM, Patrick Lynch <kmandpjlynch@verizon.net> wrote:
Thank you Hassan...
Presumably, it should be in the same directory as the .gitignore file...
--
Phillip Gawlowski
Though the folk I have met,
(Ah, how soon!) they forget
When I've moved on to some other place,
There may be one or two,
When I've played and passed through,
Who'll remember my song or my face.