Ugh, sorry Perry. It seems I forgot to actually send my email...
Anyways, Mike is correct. For more info on MSpec, and all the options
for the runners, see: http://rubyspec.org/wiki/mspec
Eloy
On Jul 7, 2009, at 10:36 PM, Mike Sassak wrote:
On Fri, Jul 3, 2009 at 9:30 AM, Perry Smith wrote
On Fri, Jul 3, 2009 at 9:30 AM, Perry Smith wrote:
>
>
> Hey, sorry to be a pest but my question about how to run a single test
> never got answered. That would help save me some time:
>
>
> I tested with the trunk and it passes too.
>
> Is this the way to run a single test?
>
> ./mspec/bin/mspec
That sounds great! But please first double-check with 1.9 HEAD, if
the spec still passes on that version, then yes, please look into it
and/or fix MacRuby.
Hey, sorry to be a pest but my question about how to run a single test
never got answered. That would help save me some time
That sounds great! But please first double-check with 1.9 HEAD, if
the spec still passes on that version, then yes, please look into it
and/or fix MacRuby.
I tested with the trunk and it passes too.
Is this the way to run a single test?
./mspec/bin/mspec run -I./lib -B ./spec/macruby.mspe
Hi,
I'm not sure if you want this traffic on the list.
Sure no problem, it's not that we that much traffic yet :)
I got everything compiled, etc. Ran the command below and captured
the output. As you mentioned, there is a segment fault.
I installed ruby 1.9.1p129 and changed the command
Hi,
I'm not sure if you want this traffic on the list.
I got everything compiled, etc. Ran the command below and captured
the output. As you mentioned, there is a segment fault.
I installed ruby 1.9.1p129 and changed the command below and added a -
t /usr/local/bin/ruby after the -B opti
Hi Perry,
I wouldn't worry too much about duplicate efforts, there aren't many
people working on the core itself.
What you could do to start out, is to run the rubyspecs in spec/frozen/
language, as they should all run iirc, but there are some tagged ones.
To run spec all which are tagged as
I'm an old crusty C programmer. I have a masters in CS and my focus
was languages and compilers. MacRuby and LLVM are really exciting to
me. I use a Mac. Working with Ruby since 2006. Love Rails. etc etc.
I saw a previous thread in the archive where a newbie wanted to help
and the rep
Hello Frisco,
one option for you is to become an expert in something MacRuby.
One area for example that could give you some good skills and could be good
for the MacRuby community (if you release the results) is the CoreAnimation
area, an area I was hoping I would have time for but will not.
So:
I am an old dog learning new tricks by reading. I remember that when I
was a young dog, I learned better by doing.
So I would like to help someone do something. I have experience writing
unit tests and documentation, but would like to do anything.
__
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