On 5/18/07, Bret Pettichord <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
If we are going to tell everyone to do 'include Watir', then we could make things easier by putting just this line of code in watir.rb and have it execute automatically when the 'require "watir"' happens.
Huh, could you do that? Here are my decidely non-expert understandings about what requiring and including do, based on playing around: - require 'watir' => I want to use things from watir (generally methods, possibly also constants, etc.) - include Watir => I don't want to have to type Watir:: in front of any watir methods I use. (Put more precisely, when I call a method without pre-pending it with the name of a file, check both this file and whatever files I've included.) If anyone who understands the above better than I do wants to add to or correct the above, I'd appreciate it.
From my perspective, I always start out by requiring and including watir,
because I'd rather paste it into the top of a script once than have to type Watir:: several times below. I was planning to say that I'd love to have watir automatically included whenever I require it...but that might have resulted in unneccessary confusion when I first started requiring (and wishing to include) other ruby modules. So in the end I think my vote is to teach include from the beginning, but not to have require automagically include as well...since that's not true for other ruby modules. Or to put in another way, why put the Watir code in a module when you
are just going to tell users to import the module into the toplevel name space? Bret _______________________________________________ Wtr-general mailing list [email protected] http://rubyforge.org/mailman/listinfo/wtr-general
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