Also, I tried "bundle exec rspec spec" but that had no effect. On Sep 1, 11:04 pm, Chris Mear <[email protected]> wrote: > On 30 August 2010 04:30, nobosh <[email protected]> wrote: > > > Hello, I'm going through the Rails 3 book (which is awesome by the > > way) here:http://railstutorial.org/chapters/static-pages#top > > > In the book it has me using "rspec" which is installed: > > bundle show rspec > > /Library/Ruby/Gems/1.8/gems/rspec-2.0.0.beta.18 > > > But when I go to run the test, "rspec spec/" I get "-bash: rspec: > > command not found" > > > Did I miss a step? thxs! > > As you've installed your gems with Bundler, try this instead: > > bundle exec rspec spec > > Bundler doesn't necessarily install gems in the standard location, > which is possibly why the rspec executable isn't in your $PATH (which > is why you got the 'command not found' error). Either way, when you're > using Bundler, you almost always want to run Ruby commands in the > context of the bundle, which is what bundle exec does. > > Chris
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