save_and_open_page
have_button(locator)
require "rubygems" | |
require "octokit" # gem install octokit | |
1.upto(5) do |page| | |
Octokit.repositories("railscasts", page: page, per_page: 100).each do |repo| | |
system "git clone git://github.com/railscasts/#{repo.name}" | |
end | |
end |
by Jonathan Rochkind, http://bibwild.wordpress.com
Capistrano automates pushing out a new version of your application to a deployment location.
I've been writing and deploying Rails apps for a while, but I avoided using Capistrano until recently. I've got a pretty simple one-host deployment, and even though everyone said Capistrano was great, every time I tried to get started I just got snowed under not being able to figure out exactly what I wanted to do, and figured I wasn't having that much trouble doing it "manually".
module Capybara | |
def Capybara.auto_save_and_open_page=(val) | |
@auto_save_and_open_page = !!val | |
end | |
def Capybara.auto_save_and_open_page? | |
@auto_save_and_open_page ||= false | |
end | |
end |
brew update | |
brew versions FORMULA | |
cd `brew --prefix` | |
git checkout HASH Library/Formula/FORMULA.rb # use output of "brew versions" | |
brew install FORMULA | |
brew switch FORMULA VERSION | |
git checkout -- Library/Formula/FORMULA.rb # reset formula | |
## Example: Using Subversion 1.6.17 | |
# |
This gist assumes:
require 'methodfinder' | |
# _why's MethodFinder addition tweaked and revised. | |
# <http://redhanded.hobix.com/inspect/stickItInYourIrbrcMethodfinder.html> | |
class MethodFinder | |
def self.with_redirected_streams | |
redirect_streams | |
yield | |
ensure |
#!/usr/bin/ruby | |
require 'rss' | |
# Usage | |
# $ ./railscasts.rb http://railscasts.com/subscriptions/YOURRAILSCASTRSS/\/ | |
# episodes.rss | |
# OR | |
# $ ./railscasts.rb | |
p 'Downloading rss index' |
urlencode() { | |
# urlencode <string> | |
old_lc_collate=$LC_COLLATE | |
LC_COLLATE=C | |
local length="${#1}" | |
for (( i = 0; i < length; i++ )); do | |
local c="${1:$i:1}" | |
case $c in |
FILE SPACING: | |
# double space a file | |
sed G | |
# double space a file which already has blank lines in it. Output file | |
# should contain no more than one blank line between lines of text. | |
sed '/^$/d;G' |