I've used RubyMine for a while and it has grown in me. Its learning curve can 
feel steep, but it is very powerful.

To get those message to go away you must install the gems inside of RubyMine's 
ruby executable, which is not necessarily the same ruby executable that you are 
used to running on the command line. You can do in the Preferences. 


It sounds to me like you actually didn't spend enough time with each of the 
IDEs you investigated, if you rejected them immediately upon finding your first 
hiccup that says to me you didn't really go very deep with them at all. Any IDE 
is a significant investment of your time -- I would say about at least a month 
to get fully proficient working with it.

Also unless an editor has a Go-To-Declaration (Command-B) I don't consider it a 
first class IDE. This is the most significant thing I look for an IDE -- not 
only did it change my entire worldview as a software developer, it even changed 
the way I write Ruby code. 




On Aug 19, 2014, at 12:10 PM, Roelof Wobben <[email protected]> wrote:

> - rubymine, A lot of error messages of missing gems and a confusing menu

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