start new:
tmux
start new with session name:
tmux new -s myname
create different ssh key according the article Mac Set-Up Git
$ ssh-keygen -t rsa -C "[email protected]"
As configured in my dotfiles.
start new:
tmux
start new with session name:
cribbed from http://pastebin.com/xgzeAmBn
Templates to remind you of the options and formatting for the different types of objects you might want to document using YARD.
# Rake Quick Reference | |
# by Greg Houston | |
# http://ghouston.blogspot.com/2008/07/rake-quick-reference.html | |
# ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- | |
# Running Rake | |
# ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- | |
# running rake from the command-line: | |
# rake --help |
location /resize { | |
alias /tmp/nginx/resize; | |
set $width 150; | |
set $height 100; | |
set $dimens ""; | |
if ($uri ~* "^/resize_(\d+)x(\d+)/(.*)" ) { | |
set $width $1; | |
set $height $2; | |
set $image_path $3; |
# http://docs.rubygems.org/read/chapter/11 | |
--- | |
gem: --no-ri --no-rdoc | |
benchmark: false | |
verbose: true | |
update_sources: true | |
sources: | |
- http://gems.rubyforge.org/ | |
- http://rubygems.org/ | |
backtrace: true |
I've used Cucumber quite a bit on my last job. It's an excellent tool, and I believe readable tests are the way to the future. But I could never get around to write effective scenarios, or maintain the boatload of text that the suite becomes once you get to a point where you have decent coverage. On top of that, it didn't seem to take much for the suite to become really slow as tests were added.
A while ago I've seen a gist by Lachie Cox where he shows how to use RSpec and Capybara to do front-end tests. That sounded perfect for me. I love RSpec, I can write my own matchers when I need them with little code, and it reads damn nicely.
So for my Rails Rumble 2010 project, as usual, I rolled a Sinatra app and figured I should give the idea a shot. Below are my findings.