|
Hi Hassan, Thanks for using VirtualRails :) you're right, there was a mistake in our documentation, now the Rails version mentioned vor virtualrails 1.1 will be everywhere 2.3.4, and we will soon release a new version with rails 2.3.5 rails. with the actual 1.1 version, you can open a terminal and run the following command : sudo gem install rails --version 2.3.5 it works just fine, and you will have the followinf output : virtualra...@jay ~ $ sudo gem install rails --version 2.3.5 [sudo] password for virtualrails: Successfully installed activesupport-2.3.5 Successfully installed activerecord-2.3.5 Successfully installed actionpack-2.3.5 Successfully installed actionmailer-2.3.5 Successfully installed activeresource-2.3.5 Successfully installed rails-2.3.5 6 gems installed Installing ri documentation for activesupport-2.3.5... Installing ri documentation for activerecord-2.3.5... Installing ri documentation for actionpack-2.3.5... Installing ri documentation for actionmailer-2.3.5... Installing ri documentation for activeresource-2.3.5... Installing ri documentation for rails-2.3.5... Installing RDoc documentation for activesupport-2.3.5... Installing RDoc documentation for activerecord-2.3.5... Installing RDoc documentation for actionpack-2.3.5... Installing RDoc documentation for actionmailer-2.3.5... Installing RDoc documentation for activeresource-2.3.5... Installing RDoc documentation for rails-2.3.5... hope it will help :) please feel free to send me support questions if you have troubles using VirtualRails ! Jérôme Fillioux VirtualRails Team -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Ruby on Rails: Talk" group. To post to this group, send email to [email protected]. To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [email protected]. For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/rubyonrails-talk?hl=en. |

