Justin W. Reagor on 5 Jun 2007 15:29:18 -0000


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Re: [PhillyOnRails] Thanks for Ruby on Mac responses; follow-up questions on Ruby back-end graphics...

  • From: "Justin W. Reagor" <justinwr@gmail.com>
  • To: talk@phillyonrails.org
  • Subject: Re: [PhillyOnRails] Thanks for Ruby on Mac responses; follow-up questions on Ruby back-end graphics...
  • Date: Tue, 5 Jun 2007 11:28:54 -0400
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Mac graphics with Quartz look promising, too.  Thanks
for the news on Ruby and Leopard.

I am not 100% sure, but I think you can use Quartz graphics with RubyCocoa. Not sure if it fits your application needs or not... but here are a couple links for the mailing list anyway.


I completed the small tutorial last night, wasn't too bad. But I do hate the naming conventions for Apple's Cocoa namespaces.

Take care,
:: Justin Reagor



On Jun 5, 2007, at 10:21 AM, GREG NEELEY wrote:

June 5.

Thanks to all for responding with Ruby on Mac build
and usage experiences.

Last week, I built the trial for Qt4.3 downloaded from
the TROLLTECH website on an old AMD LINUX box to
check out the graphics.  I'd read in Hal Fulton's
book,"The Ruby Way",
that one front-end graphics alternative is to use
QtRuby for the active GUI elements.

I was impressed by the Qt4.3 demo, particularly the
back-end animations, even though it took a couple of
hours to built their C++-based product. Haven't tried
QtRuby yet.

1) Has anybody tried QtRuby for back-end graphics from
Ruby output?

2) What back-end graphics packages for basic signal
processing and simple x-y plots are available?  I'm
thinking about
something like a "MATLAB", that offers some basic
signal processing functions such as convolution,
autocorrelation, and some other simple linear
operations.

Gary Margrave in Calgary has a book out on signal
processing fundmentals for seismic data using
"MATLAB", and I thought I'd try some simple coding
with Ruby if I could produce some comparable graphics.

Mac graphics with Quartz look promising, too.  Thanks
for the news on Ruby and Leopard.


--- "Justin W. Reagor" <justinwr@gmail.com> wrote:

I used this updated version of that Hivelogic
article when my company  
got my new Intel Mac.



...of course thats until Leopard is released with
Rails pre-installed  
(correct?).

I can also confirm that the MySQL gem only worked on
my old PPC Mac,  
and not my newer Intel. I ended up not even needing
it (only  
installing the SQLite driver). My old Rails projects
seemed to just  
fire up without the mysql gem installing correctly
(using Ruby DBI?).

I've had bad experiences with Macports/Darwinports
and all of those  
(messy compiles and crappy GUI utilities). I seem to
just compile in  
what I need and keep track of what I do install in
the console. You  
may also want to compile in Apache2 if you plan to
mimic any type of  
production environment (SSL testing with
Mongrel/Rails). OS X still  
comes with Apache 1.3.33 installed...

Take care,
:: Justin Reagor



On Jun 4, 2007, at 11:22 AM, Flinn Mueller wrote:

Ditto, the mysql gem has problems on mac,
otherwise I used the  
macports version of ruby rather than the one
distributed with mac os.

For books, I really liked Beginning Ruby on Rails
E-Commerce: From  
Novice to Professional (
bookDisplay.html?bID=10178 )

As someone coming from PHP development I had never
been exposed to  
test driven development, this books explains the
virtues, and  
rather than antidotally mentioning TDD, the
authors chose to write  
the entire book using TDD.  I know other rails
books concentrate on  
the whiz-bang ajax features and design patterns
rails offers, but I  
think TDD is often overlooked in recent books, but
I imagine it's  
getting more press nowadays.

--flinn



On Jun 4, 2007, at 11:07 AM, Colin A. Bartlett
wrote:

Jonathan Van Schoick wrote:
For configuring Rails on a Mac, I'd definitely
follow this guide:

ruby_rails_lighttpd_mysql_tiger
That's exactly what I used.

C
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