You can always spider the site (e.g., use Web Site Sucker on the Mac).
Depending on which spider utility you use, you may have to do some manual
editing afterward; Web Site Sucker, for instance, doesn't rewrite the absolute
path to the CSS stylesheet into relative paths, which means that you don't get
the nice styled appearance until you do that. Or I suppose you could pour the
spidered content into a local Web server of your own, to work around that issue.
Al
----- Original Message ----
From: Kevin Williams <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: rspec-users@rubyforge.org
Sent: Friday, January 18, 2008 7:47:20 AM
Subject: Re: [rspec-users] new in ruby and rspec testing
I find the website to be full of great examples. (wish it were
available offline)
http://rspec.info
On Jan 18, 2008 8:16 AM, Anton Komarov <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi to all
> I'm a new in ruby and RoR programming.
> And my problem is Rspec.
> I don't understand how to write test files in rspec.
> Maybe it's because I don't know ruby good.
> Can you send me links to fine examples/screencasts/e-books and other
> stuff.
> I found some on google but it not enough :(
> Thanks for replie's
> --
> Posted via http://www.ruby-forum.com/.
> _______________________________________________
> rspec-users mailing list
> rspec-users@rubyforge.org
> http://rubyforge.org/mailman/listinfo/rspec-users
>
--
Cheers,
Kevin Williams
http://www.bantamtech.com/
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