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  • Embedding tcl in ruby

    - by Jordan
    Is there any way to do this? It seems the only possible way to do this is by using ruby/tk and creating a tcl interpreter through that api. However, I'd like to use this on a system with no GUI (x windows). Am I out of options? Thanks

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  • Ruby script as service

    - by mplacona
    Well, the title say it all. I have a ruby script I want running as a service (one I can start and stop) on my Linux box. I was able to find how to do it on Windows here Some readings point to creating daemons or cron tasks. I just need something simple I can call on my box's reboot, and can stop/start whenever I please. my script has an internal sleep call, and runs in "eternal loop" thanks in advance

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  • 256 color terminal library for Ruby?

    - by brianegge
    Is there a gem like 'Term::ANSIColor' which works with 256 color terminals? The perl script 256colors2.pl works great in my terminal, and I'd like to use some of these colors in my ruby scripts without manually inserting the ANSI codes.

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  • Using ruby's OptionParser to parse sub-commands

    - by rampion
    I'd like to be able to use ruby's OptionParser to parse sub-commands of the form COMMAND [GLOBAL FLAGS] [SUB-COMMAND [SUB-COMMAND FLAGS]] like: git branch -a gem list foo I know I could switch to a different option parser library (like Trollop), but I'm interested in learning how to do this from within OptionParser, since I'd like to learn the library better. Any tips?

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  • ruby on rails - ultrasphinx

    - by satya
    Ruby on Rails - UltraSphinx Hi guys, I'm using Ultrasphinx for the search thing. My question is : I have the "rake ultrasphinx:daemon:start" running in the background. Now, should I have a cron job that does "rake ultrasphinx:index" regularly or will the daemon take care of indexing whenever a new object is created. Please, let me know. Its kind of emergency. Thanks

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  • Ruby SerialPorts

    - by Seth Archer
    I'm using the ruby serial port gem. After I open up the port I send the data I want like this. sp.write [200.chr, 30.chr, 7.chr, 5.chr, 1.chr, 2.chr, 0.chr, 245.chr].to_s It doesn't work, but if I put it in a loop of around 200 times: 200.times do sp.write [200.chr, 30.chr, 7.chr, 5.chr, 1.chr, 2.chr, 0.chr, 245.chr].to_s end It works. Any ideas on why this is happening?

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  • Ruby on Rails - jrails not site wide

    - by Hamish
    Is it possible to configure jrails so that it only replaces the ruby on rails helper methods for some parts of the site? I am currently in a project where we are doing a staggered migration to jQuery so the site wide choice is not an option in this case.

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  • Hibernate CRUD à la Ruby on Rails' Scaffolding

    - by schonarth
    Guys, Do you know of any tool that would do like Ruby on Rails' Scaffolding (create simple CRUD pages for any particular class to allow quickly populating a database with dummy data), only which used Java classes with Hibernate for database access, and JSP/JSF for the pages? It is a drag when you are programming one part of an application, but need data that can only be added with another part that is not ready yet, or very cumbersomely by directly inserting it into the DB.

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  • Ruby: opening files relative to home directory

    - by Peter
    In Ruby, the following fails with Errno::ENOENT: No such file or directory, even if the file exists: open('~/some_file') However, you can do this: open(File.expand_path('~/some_file')) Two questions: Why doesn't open process the tilde as pointing to the home directory? Is there a slicker way than using File.expand_path?

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  • Parsing a UTF-16 encoded xml file in ruby

    - by Matthew Toohey
    Hello I've been trying to parse a UTF-16 encoded xml file in Ruby (1.8.7), and I can't seem to find how to do it by searching (google and stack overflow) Here's the xml file url: http://www.abc.net.au/triplej/feeds/playout/triplejsydneyplayout.xml?_5366 Getting the xml string from Net::HTTP and passing it to REXML, then calling logger.info xmlDoc.inspect produces: <UNDEFINED> ... </> Any ideas? Cheers

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  • Error in rounding off values using .round in Ruby

    - by Shreyas Satish
    The following piece of code works perfectly in script/console but returns the following error when i compile the same in a ruby script.: :in `round': wrong number of arguments (1 for 0) (ArgumentError) tf={"ph"={0=1.33333333333333, 1=1.5}, "fee"={0=1.66666666666667}, "test"={0=1.16666666666667, 1=1.25}, "what"={0=2.0, 1=2.0}, "for"={0=1.5}, "is"={0=1.83333333333333, 1=1.75}} tf.each{|k,v| v.each{|k1,v1| tf[k][k1]=(v1.round(5))}} Any Ideas ? Cheers !

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  • Ruby Exception or Error?

    - by Ell
    I have noticed that in the Ruby exception hierarchy, there are "errors" such as ArgumentError and there are "exceptions" such as SignalException. Is there a certain practise of naming exceptions? thanks in advance, ell.

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