Got it. thanks!
On Mon, Jul 27, 2009 at 7:50 PM, Laurent Sansonetti
wrote:
> Hi Linan,
> You can evaluate "self" for that.
>
> id ruby_self = [[MacRuby sharedRuntime] evaluateString:@"self"];
>
> Laurent
>
> On Jul 27, 2009, at 1:52 AM, Linan Wang wrote:
>
> Hi Laurent,Thanks for the explanation.
Hi Linan,
You can evaluate "self" for that.
id ruby_self = [[MacRuby sharedRuntime] evaluateString:@"self"];
Laurent
On Jul 27, 2009, at 1:52 AM, Linan Wang wrote:
Hi Laurent,
Thanks for the explanation.
A related question: how to get the "main/self" object of the macruby
runtime?
On Mon
Hi Laurent,Thanks for the explanation.
A related question: how to get the "main/self" object of the macruby
runtime?
On Mon, Jul 27, 2009 at 6:50 AM, Laurent Sansonetti
wrote:
> Hi Linan,
>
> You can't really assign a Ruby local variable from Objective-C, since Ruby
> locals are generally scoped
Hi Linan,
You can't really assign a Ruby local variable from Objective-C, since
Ruby locals are generally scoped around a particular method, but you
can assign to an instance variable of a given object, a constant, a
global variable (or eventually a class variable, but this is evil,
don't
Hi everybody,I'm trying to migrate from FScript to MacRuby. The problem I'm
facing now is how to assign values to variables in the macruby runtime with
objc codes. In Fscript framework, it's fairly straightforward:
setObject:forIdentifier call of FSInterpreter.
I've tried
rb_define_varible but it d