The tools that rely on Ruby (which is a programming language) are not
needed to get started.

I would recommend taking the sample page (main blueprints
folder)/tests/parts/sample.html and starting with it.

The following from Toutorial.textile is talking about the Ruby scripts
usage. You don't need to do this to get started.
Blueprint comes with two scripts: one for compressing and customizing
the CSS, and one for validating the core CSS files, which is handy if
you're making changes to these files.

More on Ruby at: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ruby_%28programming_language%29

Sunny



On Wed, Nov 11, 2009 at 9:38 AM, Hans <[email protected]> wrote:
> Hi
> Sorrry for my question. I try to figure out if your Blueprint system
> works for me.
> Situation: MacOSX 10.4.11 standard installation.
> I do see a folder on my Mac which says: ruby. But I see noting but
> files in there, no app. as far as i can see. Ruby is not listed in my
> apps list either, like Photoshop etc.
> When I try to have compress.rb to open and search for ruby, I cannot
> point that file to a program. How does this stuff work?
>
> Thank you for answering.
>
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