you're looking for a cheap way to get in to learning web tech, this
seems like a fantastic offer. I'm really keen to try it out!
http://raspberrycolocation.com/home/
Isn't that neat? Anyone have any cool ideas for what we can do with this stuff?
—
Jenna Fox
I'm in the inner sydney suburbs (terrace houses and all that), but Judofyr is
over in Norway! Judofyr is probably the main contributor to camping in recent
years - I haven't committed much code to the actual camping software, but I did
do the web design everyone seems to hate at http://camping.i
One more thing - the text in the trailer misspells Why's name several times.
Here are the preferred rules for naming him in writing, as told by Why:
- "Why The Lucky Stiff" or "why the lucky stiff" - but never "Why the lucky
stiff" or "Why the Lucky Stiff"
- "Why" (for short, always capitali
I saw this trailer and it looks really interesting. I'm very much looking
forward to it, as Why was a big part of my life. Many years ago, I was
suffering from some psychological problems and Why taught me that being crazy
and kooky was alright - that people could even love you for it. Sadly I'm
> I think that a simple daily backup would suffice to guarantee any issue. We
> have a forum at http://dotgeek.org so I think we will use that one. I was
> also thinking about a coding competition with prizes etc. what do you think ?
> thanks again
> David
>
>
> On
I'm not sure I understand the usefulness of the second and third server? Is it
for redundancy? If I were running free hosting I'd be cautious of such things
as I wouldn't want to give the users the impression I was going to be
completely committed to keeping it online forever and having bulletpr
t; end
>
> module App::Controllers
> def index
> Views::Index.render(self)
> end
> end
>
> This can also serve static files with correct MIME-type:
>
> __END__
>
> /style.css
> * { margin: 0; padding: 0 }
>
> // Magnus Holm
>
> On Wed, Aug 15,
What makes this better than a here doc?
—
Jenna
On Wednesday, 15 August 2012 at 6:18 PM, judo...@gmail.com wrote:
> It's been implemented here:
> https://github.com/camping/camping/commit/407e2ddd441f438722828dc77d9094e0dea66143,
> but I don't think the current released version of Camping h
rkaby instead of erb I
doubt Judofyr's twitter worm would have worked.
—
Jenna Fox
On Wednesday, 15 August 2012 at 1:56 AM, gurugeek wrote:
> Jenna - Trevor,
> many thanks for this. It works fine but perhaps I should stick to markaby for
> the example page so it would be eas
Good good. Seems to be working now. Mailman glitch
—
Jenna
On Tuesday, 14 August 2012 at 6:07 PM, Bartosz Dziewoński wrote:
> It went thru to me.
>
> -- Matma Rex
>
>
> 2012/8/14 Jenna Fox mailto:a...@creativepony.com)>:
> > testing. list seems
See magnus's post at
http://rubyforge.org/pipermail/camping-list/2010-August/001413.html for info on
using the haml and erb support built in to Camping.
Also note that you don't need to 'render' anything. You can just set @body to
whatever string you want in your controller, or even return an
testing. list seems to be ignoring my messages
—
Jenna
___
Camping-list mailing list
Camping-list@rubyforge.org
http://rubyforge.org/mailman/listinfo/camping-list
We'd need a syntax highlighting gem on the server, but it should be easy enough
to construct such a snippet otherwise
—
Jenna
On Wednesday, 9 May 2012 at 8:14 PM, Dave Everitt wrote:
> > View Source link for open web apps and demos.
>
>
> I just added a link to the github repo on my link
logs? Push notification stream server? View
Source link for open web apps and demos.
—
Jenna Fox
On Wednesday, 9 May 2012 at 1:30 PM, gurugeek wrote:
>
> On May 8, 2012, at 4:04 PM, Anthony Durity wrote:
> > What are the limitations?
>
>
> I forgot to add t
A lot of repos for websites have dots in them, should fix it to support
anything github can support.
—
Jenna
On Monday, 7 May 2012 at 10:30 AM, gurugeek wrote:
>
> On May 7, 2012, at 2:23 AM, Jenna Fox wrote:
> > Things:
> > 1) It'd be super cool if the user types
Things:
1) It'd be super cool if the user types in their email address as the username
if it still works
2) I wonder what I'm doing wrong? I enter in bluebie/whywentcamping.com in the
github repo name and it says my url contains invalid characters?
—
Jenna
On Sunday, 6 May 2012 at 10:41 AM, g
So essentially you want the 'label' string inserted verbatim as html code,
rather than as plain text?
li { a(:href => link) { label } }
In markaby and presumably mab, strings passed as arguments are escaped, and
html is inserted as bodies of elements via blocks - you can build that body
ei
ense then normally go with
> > > (L)GPL2
> > > (L)GPL3
> > > Apache
> > > MIT
> > > BSD
> > >
> > > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_FSF_approved_software_licences
> > >
> > > If you want to free it to the four co
Yes.
—
Jenna
On Wednesday, 2 May 2012 at 11:14 PM, Dave Everitt wrote:
> thanks - a compact but completely-formed answer. So 'mab is the
> Camping-specific markaby' would be an accurate statement? - DaveE
>
> > Mab is going to be the new one going forward. If I remember right, the
> > rea
but not have it FOSS
> then public domain it - certain high profile pieces of software are public
> domain (Sqlite I think?) but not many.
>
> Hope that helps. Apologies if you already knew all this.
>
> On Wed, May 2, 2012 at 1:34 PM, Jenna Fox (mailto:a...@creativepony.com)>
Mab is going to be the new one going forward. If I remember right, the reasons
for this were:
1) Markaby isn't very well maintained these days
2) Markaby is all about xhtml, which is totally irrelevant to the modern web.
3) Markaby doesn't explicitly have a license allowing us to do stuff to it
A few of you sounded interested in using it. I haven't explicitly put a
software license on it, so I guess it's not technically FOSS yet. What licenses
are good? BSD? Public Domain?
—
Jenna
___
Camping-list mailing list
Camping-list@rubyforge.org
h
create something
> else that's cool.
>
> PS.
>
> I'll work my ass off to have the first screencast done on tuesday!
>
> Cheers!
>
> Isak Andersson
>
> Jenna Fox mailto:a...@creativepony.com)> skrev:
> > So here we are, talking about t
d
> this, create another small image to set as background to #subwrap>*
> containing just the texture).
>
> I don't know why the fonts don't display, but I'll try looking into it.
>
> -- Matma Rex
>
>
> 2012/4/29 Jenna Fox mailto:a...@creativepony.
Yeah I'm not even going to attempt that one. Opera is way out of my league. If
you know how to fix it, I'd love the help, otherwise I'm all for opera's plan
to pretend to be webkit. Maybe there's some way we can detect it and show opera
a simpler website?
—
Jenna
On Sunday, 29 April 2012 at
So here we are, talking about the website again.
Here's my thinking:
David Costa's nearly got that neat camping app hosting thing working, which is
amazingly awesome and we love him so much! People have all sorts of interesting
ideas for things the camping site could do and have - lists of ap
So, I went a little crazy this weekend and did a whole bunch of things:
* camping.io now renders properly in Chrome (yay! why didn't anyone tell me
this was broken? evolving web standards are annoying!)
* I tidied up some issues and commented on heaps of things on
https://github.com/camping/ca
Sorry correction - the argument to ChillDB for setting your password is pass:
'hackerbats', not password: 'hackerbats'. Silly me! Maybe chill should accept
both!
—
Jenna
On Friday, 27 April 2012 at 1:47 AM, Jenna Fox wrote:
> Sure. To connect chilldb using
So far as uploading a couchdb to a git repository - You could probably find the
files somewhere in your system and do that, but it sounds like a bad idea.
Better: use wget to download the all_docs page, backing up all the documents on
that database in to a single file. Then you can restore it by
ve
> this on ChillDB::Database but just wanted to get something simple to cover
> the username/password and/or remote couch server with a different URL than
> localhost)
>
> and again a very simple usage to keep a database of users and a map
> reduce/view to select a us
I wonder if you were running SQLite on a linux server which stored your files
on a remotely linked drive? Some large hosting companies (mediatemple is a
great example) link in your files over NFS or other network filesystems, and
those can often be a little buggy with regard to file locking. It'
Glad you like it! Chill isn't totally feature complete, but it has the
important bits I think. If you ever find yourself needing extra bits I'd love
to bulk it out some more - I just haven't had a use for it lately and I've not
wanted to design APIs I'm not using myself. Much of the choices were
> considering that _why is no longer around I do not think that it would be
> appropriate to use the name he assigned his hack for a project that did not
> follow his ideals. Choose another name, can't be that hard, can it?
>
> Regards,
> Anthony
>
>
&g
I think the trouble with streaming over the rack interface is that it's
confusing. I'm fairly good at ruby, but I'm not entirely sure how it would even
work. I guess I need to run my app in a threaded web server, running every
request in it's own thread? Then inside the each iterator in the resp
Woah.
Okay! I'm convinced! Lets make Rails 4.0!
—
Jenna
On Wednesday, 18 April 2012 at 11:45 PM, Matthias Wächter wrote:
> Am 13.04.2012 17:40, schrieb Jenna Fox:
> > An A4 piece of paper has a little over 9kb of data storage if storing in
> > binary at 300dpi
> &g
Those are all great points - the eventstream support is a particular sticking
point to me. It feels like a standard which aught to be easily implemented -
even through rack! but I've yet to see any web frameworks where eventstream
doesn't seem like a total hack - except perhaps for Node.JS where
So the 3kb thing is pretty important to you? Anyone else feel the same way? :)
—
Jenna
On Monday, 16 April 2012 at 10:17 PM, Nokan Emiro wrote:
> Hi,
>
> As a simple user of Camping I would prefer to have a classic and
> a "modern" one. in one gem or in separate ones, that's not an issue.
>
Urgh. I just turn the validation in markaby off pretty much all of the time -
like strictly typed languages, I find it gets in my way more often than it
helps me find errors.
Instead of using the xhtml_strict macro you could do it yourself:
self << "\n"
html "lang" => 'lc', "xml:lang" => 'lc'
O_o
I think the extra character is worth it.
—
Jenna
On Monday, 16 April 2012 at 9:40 AM, david costa wrote:
> Ah well the is not on fcgi but passenger :)
> I would say that most of the serious ruby/rails hosting now offer passenger
> as an option so shouldn't limit your application porta
nt - maybe we should
just deprecate the syntax and switch to symbols. Symbols syntaxically look
worse. Maybe there's another way which would be nice and tidy but also not
depend on shuffling references to constants all over the place.
—
Jenna
On Saturday, 14 April 2012 at 5:37 AM, Magnus Ho
On the other hand, Camping is already far too big to fit entirely in a QR code.
It would take as many as TWO QR codes to store camping in it's entirety.
—
Jenna
On Saturday, 14 April 2012 at 1:40 AM, Jenna Fox wrote:
> An A4 piece of paper has a little over 9kb of data storage if st
An A4 piece of paper has a little over 9kb of data storage if storing in binary
at 300dpi
—
Jenna
On Saturday, 14 April 2012 at 1:09 AM, Dave Everitt wrote:
> There's a crucial point here... if 3k (the old 4k) is a 'proof of concept'
> and a great exercise in programming skill, it isn't som
need the performance boost of doing it at the web server
level can do that - it just wont happen by default. Deployment is one of the
biggest hassles we face - this may help.
—
Jenna
On Friday, 13 April 2012 at 12:26 AM, Magnus Holm wrote:
> On Thu, Apr 12, 2012 at 15:59, Jenna Fox (mail
The problem is basically this:
Sometimes you want to reference static files, and other components of your
site. I have a Gallery app mounted at http://creativepony.com/gallery/ and it
causes me all sorts of trouble. Often times to reference static files I end up
needing to use /../ in URLs in
Looks like Judofyr isn't working on the book generator thingie, so I'll sort
out a new site thing.
Still sticking with caching to static files on github for now. Anyone have
particular feature requests for navigational stuff and the likes? Things which
would be helpful for book contributors a
I don't think we should ever consider pagerank in decision making.
Sounds like a nice idea otherwise tho. Does anyone want to maintain a page like
that?
—
Jenna Fox
On Wednesday, 11 April 2012 at 9:37 PM, Nokan Emiro wrote:
> Hi List,
>
> What about creating a section on th
Camping is a rack app. Check out the rack docs for info on how to mount it as
any kind of server interface.
—
Jenna Fox
On Saturday, 7 April 2012 at 1:26 AM, david costa wrote:
> Hello all,
> I am running in some little stumbling blocks with passenger as a multi user
> environ
Let me know exactly what text you want replaced with exactly what, and I'll
make that change now.
—
Jenna
On Tuesday, 3 April 2012 at 7:07 PM, Isak Andersson wrote:
> Hello.
>
> I think we should update the book a little bit. On the part of
> migrations we use "def self.up" and "def self
Okay then. But then we'd make sure that the applications don't have
> > privilege to install gems then.
> >
> > --
> > Skickat från min Android-telefon med K-9 E-post. Ursäkta min fåordighet.
> >
> > Jenna Fox mailto:a...@creativepony.com)> s
of a security issue isn't it?
>
> Anyways. Perhaps we could offer some Gems to pick from that we think are
> quality! (rack_csrf, scrypt).
> --
> Skickat från min Android-telefon med K-9 E-post. Ursäkta min fåordighet.
>
> Jenna Fox skrev:
> I don't think we need to g
; makes use of gems other than Camping. For example, rack_csrf. And we should
> make sure that dependencies get installed. :)
> --
> Skickat från min Android-telefon med K-9 E-post. Ursäkta min fåordighet.
>
> Jenna Fox mailto:a...@creativepony.com)> skrev:
> > Hm. I kn
urity or given only to active people.
> > >
> > > How does heroku screens against abuses?
> > > Anyway if some of you would like to be alpha users in this system let me
> > > know, I will be glad to set you up as soon as I am done testing
&g
WebDav for nginx: http://wiki.nginx.org/HttpDavModule
Or you could implement webdav as an application nginx proxies to, just as it
proxies to ruby instances.
—
Jenna
On Sunday, 1 April 2012 at 2:11 AM, david costa wrote:
> On Sat, Mar 31, 2012 at 5:36 PM, Isak Andersson (mailto:icepa...@la
The main downside to passenger, is that when things go wrong, it can be a bit
'thar be monsters in here!'
It's a bit of a mysterious technology which isn't very well documented when
stuff doesn't work, or at least it wasn't when I was playing with it about 8
months ago. I ended up settling on t
Oh whoops! I forgot to press the save button on the dns management page. Should
go through now, certainly within the next hour.
On fastcgi - fastcgi is not a server in itself - you cannot connect to it with
a web browser. Like Passenger, it's a way for a server like nginx or apache to
launch an
be sure that it works fine!
>
>
> On Sat, Mar 31, 2012 at 2:52 PM, Jenna Fox (mailto:a...@creativepony.com)> wrote:
> > @David - sorted, both those subdomains now point to your machine. :)
> >
> > —
> > Jenna
> >
> >
> > On Saturday,
ain !
> >
> > first worry is to have a working system that is fairly stable and usable
> > albeit it might be launched as alpha/beta anyway :)
> >
> >
> > On Sat, Mar 31, 2012 at 6:33 AM, Jenna Fox > (mailto:a...@creativepony.com)> wro
ould need to run the camping.io DNS on the hosting server
> to create the sub domains on the fly. I started working on it more details on
> a separate email.
>
> I love your idea about the key-value database how can we implement this ?
> Thanks
> David
>
>
> On S
Those both sound like brilliant servers! I'm not laughing at all. If my mac
mini is good enough for sky rim, it's good enough for web hosting for sure!
Can we just use camping.io?
I think starting simple is a good idea. Databases are pretty cool among web
developers for various reasons, but I t
both come from one program on the
server, simplifying setup.
—
Jenna Fox
On Saturday, 31 March 2012 at 5:28 AM, Dave Everitt wrote:
> Having just spent a whole afternoon: updating my sources in Debian
> just to install curl just to install rvm and check rvm requirements...
> [pa
Disable comments on youtube perhaps?
P.S. RE: 'unicorn sounds nice' for those who haven't heard it yet, this is what
Unicorn sounds like: http://d.pr/olau
—
Jenna
On Saturday, 31 March 2012 at 1:20 AM, Dave Everitt wrote:
> > On 30 Mar 2012, at 14:51, david costa wrote:
> >
> > Vimeo is
a better
> option since it's ment to serve static pages and Unicorn will be the one
> handling all the dynamic stuff.
> --
> Skickat från min Android-telefon med K-9 E-post. Ursäkta min fåordighet.
>
> Jenna Fox mailto:a...@creativepony.com)> skrev:
> > For screen
t 12:55 AM, Jenna Fox wrote:
> I've never heard of that. Camping is a rack app. It works with any kind of
> rack server. Thin is in no way official or standard. Use whatever you think
> is good! There are so many ways to deploy ruby apps and nearly all of them
> are really great.
> > >
> > > Anyways, about the deployment video. I was thinking I hook an application
> > > up with Unicorn and
> > > putting nginx on top of it. How does that sound?
> > >
> > > - Isak Andersson
> > >
> > >
> > > On 0
"friendly" isn't it?
> >
> > And what did you think about the image :)
> >
> > - Isak
> > --
> > Skickat från min Android-telefon med K-9 E-post. Ursäkta min fåordighet.
> >
> > Jenna Fox mailto:a...@creativepony.com)> skrev:
> > >
hing I'm wondering about is the
> title font. I went with a "goofy" one just because Camping is damn fun, but
> I'm not sure
> if I find it perfect.. What do you guys think?
>
> Here's the image: http://i.imgur.com/8zLJc.png
>
> On 03/30/2012 08:58
oyment video. I was thinking I hook an application up
> with Unicorn and
> putting nginx on top of it. How does that sound?
>
> - Isak Andersson
>
> On 03/30/2012 08:35 AM, Jenna Fox wrote:
> > Seconding Vimeo - it's exactly the sort of creative friendly helpful
Seconding Vimeo - it's exactly the sort of creative friendly helpful community
we get along so great with. :)
I wouldn't bother with youtube. The main thing is that people can comment and
embed and vote/like it and all that wonderful stuff. :)
—
Jenna
On Friday, 30 March 2012 at 5:28 PM,
n - competition. We
> can have 3 prizes and we can let people (or a jury) vote for the most
> original idea / usage. Prizes could be something like a tablet and/or other
> IT gears. With a bit of advertising it could be successful. I do welcome
> any comment on this.
>
> Th
27;t get it I think !
>
> Will see how I can progress with the screencasts but making them to display
> them on a tumblr blog is not exactly very motivating. Perhaps I got caught by
> the enthusiasm too quickly - my bad!
> Best Wishes
> David
>
>
> On Th
> On another note tumblr is not exactly very stable !
>
> *this said* I totally see your point as you have this functionality already
> on tumblr so if one wants to be up and quickly with something it is certainly
> better than any bigger but uncoded masterplan :)
>
> Re
the likes too.
—
Jenna Fox
On Thursday, 29 March 2012 at 12:22 AM, Paul van Tilburg wrote:
> On Wed, Mar 28, 2012 at 06:57:51AM -0600, Philippe Monnet wrote:
> > I think it would be fun too. Love meta stuff.
> > In general I think the more tutorials / screencasts / posts /
a site for your comics, a multiplayer game?
—
Jenna
On Wednesday, 28 March 2012 at 1:45 AM, Dave Everitt wrote:
> Great! The first thing is to decide *what* to screencast... the 'blog in 10
> minutes' idea is a bit old (although an updated version would be good because
> there's an old Camp
I'd be more than happy to help with screencasts and writing. I'm quite good
with Final Cut and Motion, but someone else would need to take the lead on that
and delegate tasks to me, as my mind is tied up in other projects for the next
few months.
—
Jenna
On Tuesday, 27 March 2012 at 8:59 AM
m really keen to kill this myth that camping is inactive. Another way
> I think we might do this is to bring in camping-related projects as well. In
> the same way rails is the home of active record, perhaps camping aught to be
> the home of things like mab. — Jenna Fox
>
motivations
would be?
—
Jenna Fox
On Wednesday, 1 February 2012 at 2:18 PM, adam moore wrote:
> I've recently been using Arch linux and 90% of the appeal comes from
> their awesome user-led wiki..
> Something which we can gradually add to, build on camping of course,
> and which han
ls is the home of active record, perhaps camping aught to be the home of
things like mab.
—
Jenna Fox
___
Camping-list mailing list
Camping-list@rubyforge.org
http://rubyforge.org/mailman/listinfo/camping-list
failing test case, running in camping:
def layout
text "\n"
html { head { title "foo" } }
end
Markaby output:
foo
Mab output:
<!DOCTYPE html>
foo
—
Jenna Fox
On Wednesday, 25 January 2012 at 10:00 PM, Magnus Holm wrote:
> gem install camping --s
Excellent work! and some great examples you have in that readme ;)
—
Jenna Fox
On Monday, 16 January 2012 at 6:26 AM, Magnus Holm wrote:
> Just thought I'd let you know that I've been working on Mab lately:
>
> https://github.com/camping/mab.
>
> This will re
left to right along this line, then the response travels
back right to left as each 'call' method on the middleware objects finish their
work and return to the next layer leftward.
—
Jenna Fox
On Monday, 2 January 2012 at 10:10 PM, Daniel Bryan wrote:
> I'm trying to implement s
to specify
any arbitrary folder as the public files.
—
Jenna Fox
On Tuesday, 20 December 2011 at 9:19 PM, Paul van Tilburg wrote:
> On Tue, Dec 20, 2011 at 11:06:09AM +0100, Isak Andersson wrote:
> > I think Alternative 2 makes the most sense. Then you can have multiple apps
>
t. So that's
really the balance which justifies keeping active record as an optional
dependancy (and besides, it isn't even really that excellent anyway). It's
dependancy effectively includes hundreds of megabytes or even gigabytes of
developer tools.
—
Jenna Fox
On Tuesday, 2
Oh yeah, totes BYOORM
—
Jenna Fox
On Tuesday, 20 December 2011 at 7:38 PM, Magnus Holm wrote:
> On Mon, Dec 19, 2011 at 23:24, Jenna Fox (mailto:a...@creativepony.com)> wrote:
> > I'd like markaby to be a hard dependancy - it's the default, if it isn't
> >
it should have a new name. Why’s legacy serves
only as a distraction, lets move on.
I suggest for your consideration: Pagely
—
Jenna Fox
On Tuesday, 20 December 2011 at 7:36 PM, Magnus Holm wrote:
> 2011/12/19 Bartosz Dziewoński (mailto:matma@gmail.com)>:
> > 2011/12/19
I tried to use that crazy stuff recently and it just doesn't work, in
webkit at least.
—
Jenna
On 20/12/2011, at 4:34 PM, Steve Klabnik wrote:
> Yep! Granted, if you serve it with an XML MIME type, it must be able
> to be parsed with an XML parser, so none of that
>
>
> this is insane
>
> stu
Oh I didn't realise they had a formal 'use it with xml mime-type' sort of
arrangement as well as the polyglot markup. Thanks for schooling me, Steve! :)
—
Jenna Fox
On Tuesday, 20 December 2011 at 12:48 PM, Steve Klabnik wrote:
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HTML5
Nah I'd still just think "I want camping! I'll install camping!" but then it'd
just work :P
—
Jenna Fox
On Tuesday, 20 December 2011 at 1:15 PM, David Susco wrote:
> So then I'd have to remember it's the opposite of the way it's been? :P
>
ds to be XML
or is just plain friendly compact HTML.
—
Jenna Fox
On Tuesday, 20 December 2011 at 10:09 AM, Dave Everitt wrote:
> > Small note: XHTML did survive, it's XHTML2 which didn't: there's an
> > XML version of HTML5 called XHTML5.
> >
> >
If no hard dependancies, can we switch it around so core camping is in a
camping-seedling gem, and the regular camping gem is actually the one with all
the omnibus? I always forget when setting up a new system and end up confused
why camping isn't working
—
Jenna Fox
On Tuesda
ason) want to refuse markaby's
inclusion, they can ask rubygems to bypass dependancies.
—
Jenna Fox
On Tuesday, 20 December 2011 at 8:26 AM, Magnus Holm wrote:
> On Mon, Dec 19, 2011 at 21:34, Isak Andersson (mailto:icepa...@lavabit.com)> wrote:
> > > My suggestion would be
Mmm that's true. Lets stick with that.
—
Jenna Fox
On Tuesday, 20 December 2011 at 9:37 AM, Magnus Holm wrote:
> On Mon, Dec 19, 2011 at 23:26, Jenna Fox (mailto:a...@creativepony.com)> wrote:
> > 'public' is a weird word which has special meaning in the context
'public' is a weird word which has special meaning in the context of web
development for legacy reasons. I think we could find a better word.
'Resources', 'web', 'files'?
—
Jenna Fox
On Tuesday, 20 December 2011 at 8:41 AM, Magnus Holm wrote:
> I
k?
None of those things are clear, when writing set :controllers (or set :views
for that matter!), which means explaining them in docs or by reading camping's
source code, which means memorising more new facts you don't really need to
know, wasting everyone's time, and distracti
classes or adding new methods to
existing classes.
—
Jenna Fox
On Monday, 19 December 2011 at 8:56 AM, icepa...@lavabit.com wrote:
> What I am doing now is basically the same as requiring. If I do require
> with all the files, they don't become a part of the controllers module.
>
Aw..
That is rather disappointing. But still, I see this problem as a chance to be
reborn anew. Fresh and clean of the bad lessons learnt by Markaby. We did learn
some lessons, didn't we?
—
Jenna Fox
On Sunday, 18 December 2011 at 7:27 PM, Magnus Holm wrote:
> On Sun, Dec 18,
Nice! Lets just all use this thing!
What say you, everyone?
—
Jenna Fox
On Sunday, 18 December 2011 at 12:47 PM, Steve Klabnik wrote:
> A wild project appears: http://krainboltgreene.github.com/dapper-dan/
> ___
> Camping-list mai
Doesn't that sound like a cool thing?
—
Jenna Fox
On Sunday, 18 December 2011 at 9:33 AM, Magnus Holm wrote:
> Okay, we might have a slight problem:
>
> It doesn't seem that Markaby ever had a specific license. This means
> that it's currently "Copyr
ly need to do is to update the
> code for the actual site.
> I have no idea on how to do that, someone who knows should probably look in
> to that.
> Then I can finally go to the site without having to switch browser ;)
>
> Cheers!
>
> Isak
>
>
>
> Den 2011
You can't use ActiveRecord with map-reduce databases anyhow, without loosing a
bunch of performance and features. It's best to use a specialised adaptor just
for Riak. It looks a bit similar to CouchDB, so you might also like to have a
look at that if you can't find any good rubygems for riak.
If you add the line '@auto_validation = false' to the beginning of your layout,
markaby aught to stop minding if you use things unspecified in xhtml. I'm not
too sure if that will let you use unknown tags, or just unknown attributes.
If you have any trouble getting unknown tags to work, try usin
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