Brandon C. wrote:
RideMe had pretty much the same feature set, but it looked like
VisualStudio.Net, and thats been my home for a while
Have you tried using Visual Studio itself? That’s what Ruby In Steel
gives you ![]()
best wishes
Huw
Brandon C. wrote:
RideMe had pretty much the same feature set, but it looked like
VisualStudio.Net, and thats been my home for a while
Have you tried using Visual Studio itself? That’s what Ruby In Steel
gives you ![]()
best wishes
Huw
I could never get RadRails (including latest version) to automatically
generate a Rails Project through its menu. I think some other people
had this problem too and suggested you need to create it using rails as
per normal and then go to RadRails.
Can anyone comment on this & whether there is a fix or work around (I
left radrails alone as I never got past this first test scenario I had,
i.e. use RadRails to generate a rails project)
Ya, RadRails is really sharp too. They did a great job.
RideMe had pretty much the same feature set, but it looked like
VisualStudio.Net, and thats been my home for a while, so it keeps me in
comfort zone so I can really focus on learning RoR.
Xia __ wrote:
100% Radrails;
it’s gotten a lot better in the last release, and being able to
command+shift+V to the model/view/controller linked to whatever your
cursor is sitting on is HOT.
Huw C. wrote:
Have you tried using Visual Studio itself? That’s what Ruby In Steel
gives you
Huw
Ya, I thought about that but I don’t have Visual Studio 2005 and Ruby In
Steel won’t work with the free version of VS2005.
I’m seriously considering dumping VS.NET in favor of SharpDevelop for
any future .Net 2.0 work I’ll be doing.
On 8/24/06, Brandon C. [email protected] wrote:
Ya, I thought about that but I don’t have Visual Studio 2005 and Ruby In
Steel won’t work with the free version of VS2005.
Huw,
Why won’t Steel work with the Express version? Seems like you’d have a
much
wider audience if it did.
I’d love to give it a shot, but don’t have VS2005 either.
Thanks,
Jake
i was playing around with radrails for a while, but soonafter moved on;
not that i can say anything bad about radrails, but ((quoted above))
" I didn’t want RadRails learning curve adding to my Rails learning
curve."
jedit is the one and only. great to grow old with.
harp
Jake C. wrote:
Why won’t Steel work with the Express version?
This is purely technical. The Express editions do not support
third-party packages. Ruby In Steel integrates fully with Visual Studio
You can find a bit more on this suject here:
http://www.sapphiresteel.com/Visual-Studio-Economics
best wishes
Huw
On 8/24/06, Huw C. [email protected] wrote:
Huw,
After reading, I wonder if you’ve considered gathering donations from
the
community to raise the $10K so you could distribute freely? I’d wager
that,
given the size of the Rails community, you wouldn’t have many problems
doing
so.
Just a thought.
Jake
Jake C. wrote:
On 8/24/06, Huw C. [email protected] wrote:
Huw,
After reading, I wonder if you’ve considered gathering donations from
the community to raise the $10K so you could distribute freely?
Nice thought ![]()
Initially we are continuing to work towards a commercial edition (the
free edition with editing, debugging and the rest will remain free but
the commercial edition will have some added extras such as full
IntelliSense and a much faster debugger). Let’s just say that if we make
sufficient profit from that edition we will give serious thoughts to
investing $10,000 in creating a standalone edition.
However, that’s a little way off yet…
best wishes
Huw
I’ve recently moved over to EasyEclipse:
http://www.easyeclipse.org/site/distributions/ruby-rails.html
I was previously using JEdit, which was OK, but EasyEclipse is better.
Faster syntax checking, connection into svn, better working with rhtml.
The only down side is that I can’t seem to customise tool buttons. Also,
I’m nervous about editting YAML with it as it isn’t easy to spot tabs.
So I use TextPad for my YAMLs.
I’ve tried RadRails but keep going back to JEdit w/ Ruby plugin. It’s
faster, leaner, and I find that I don’t use all the extra RadRails
features like the generators (the console works great for that stuff).
I also find the Preferences in RadRails very confusing (probably
because I’m not used to working with Eclipse).
It would be nice to have more features added to the JEdit Ruby plugin,
and I’m hoping that will be the case.
Once debuggining support has been implemented in RadRails (expected in
v1.0)
it’s going to rock. I’ve used Eclispe and the JBoss IDE, and the
integrated
debugger that fires up when you trigger a breakpoint via the browser
saves
lots of time.
Hi Pratik,
I use RadRails 0.7. I havent found a single error in it yet. But it
lacks
some feature like it doesnt have full intellisense support. I am
downloading
plasmacode now. I hope it will satisfy my needs!
Thanks!
Reagards,
Anil W.
On 8/24/06, Pratik [email protected] wrote:
RubyjEdit http://rubyjedit.org/ (plugin for jEdit)
From: [email protected]
There’s also RideMe, but haven’t tried it. I use TextMate,
Everyone seems to love RadRails, but that must be the
great, but I am training myself from first principles. I want
rm -rf / 2>/dev/null - http://null.inDont judge those who try and fail, judge those who fail to try…
–
Don’t live to geek; geek to live.
http://anildigital.blogspot.com
Using Firefox? It’s a very annoying bug. It’s fixed in the trunk builds
(for
Firefox 3), but won’t be fixed for Firefox 2.
-Jonathan.
Hey!
I’m ajax-showing a form in one of my views,
but it doesn’t show the blinking cursor when you tab through the
textfields.
Typing in them works fine,
you just dan’t see the cursor.
Anyone have any ideas?
Thanks guys!
Gustav
This forum is not affiliated to the Ruby language, Ruby on Rails framework, nor any Ruby applications discussed here.
Sponsor our Newsletter | Privacy Policy | Terms of Service | Remote Ruby Jobs