HELP setting up a SU code editor
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cheers for that thomthom,
the resources on the link, I have all those and more, but I can't work out how to point the editor at them, there's to many ways that might be right, or all be wrong....
you can point to specific Ruby versions, helper Gems, API's etc., which I have a choice of on Mac, but I want to set it up so they still work on PC's
and so we can co-work, on a single script direct from the editor, over platforms/time and space....
The reason I've gone for this one is it looks very good for WD input as well.
john
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@thomthom said:
Would be very interesting if someone found a way to hook this IDE into SU so one could step through code and profile.
I think you can with this, that's what I'm trying to do...
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the thing about setting SU as the framework is we can filter non-working methods and add custom one at source
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@driven said:
the resources on the link, I have all those and more, but I can't work out how to point the editor at them, there's to many ways that might be right, or all be wrong....
I've not used this editor - so I'm not sure what you mean by pointing the editor to them?
@driven said:
you can point to specific Ruby versions, helper Gems, API's etc., which I have a choice of on Mac, but I want to set it up so they still work on PC's
On PC the ruby version is 1.8.0 - wonder if it reports a slightly different version on OSX..?
(somewhat offtopic - but how did you set up this editor for Ruby? I only see RubyRails. And trying to click on Get It for any plugin does nothing.)
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Not off topic at all, unless someone is already using it , I think hammering out common ground is good...
it has built in messaging and external user code input....
and this
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I installed the plain studio. Did you install the RadRails?
If so - can one disable the Rails part of it? So when coding in Ruby one does not get code insight for Rails? -
I did instal a couple of the plugins
the Quantum DataBase is a plugin which I think can be set as a repositry
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yes,
RadRails plugin after studiorudy is standalone
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I'll convert your template and apply it to something as a test...
I wish the forum had cut and paste for attachments....
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what did you do when it asked for an Ruby installation?
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I'm a veteran of both Eclipse and NetBeans and highly recommend both for large projects. Haven't seen the benefit of trying either for Ruby plugins.
I don't know of any progress on the polylingual problem. In Java, you could use HTML in the JavaDoc, but the editor didn't really get the "language switch here" message. Maybe it's gotten better in the last couple years.
This problem is taken to the extreme in WebDialog work. My current project has one file mixing Ruby, JavaScript, HTML and CSS. If you find a tool that will do syntax highlighting for something like this, do let us all know!
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My TT_Lib library is growing and could really benefit from an IDE. And also is the Vertex Edit plugin I'm working on - which I sorely miss profiling for.
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How does it work with Aptana and setting up a project in the Plugins folder?
Can I create a project which includes the loader .rb in my plugins folder and then the accompanying folder?I tried some other editors before, but they'd insist in adding all .rb files in the plugins folder.
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@Martin I was going to PM this to you as I think it does all that+ more, and being open source also means gaps can be filled... by you clever ones....
@Thomas, I think you set up the project in your home directory with your sketchup ruby in /Plugins folder and it gets updated as you go along...
Martin, Dan, Jim, Todd, TIG, Fredo, TBD, Alex, Scott,,,,,,,ect,,,,,,,, please try it out, your assistance would be hugely beneficial..
EDIT: and I should also plead to AdamB for his Mac insight as well
This is not a mutually exclusive list it's groveling to ALL and any -
This is where I read about it and may answer some questions for the more advanced....http://www.cherny.com/webdev/91/code-text-editors-for-web-development
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I have to admit that I do not understand what an IDE does over just using Notepad++ to write scripts? What is all this extra functionality that we keep talking about?
Chris
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@chris fullmer said:
I have to admit that I do not understand what an IDE does over just using Notepad++ to write scripts? What is all this extra functionality that we keep talking about?
Chris
IDE usually allow you to hook a debugger to your code, so you can set breakpoints and step through code, evaluate variable values live and profile your code to find where the choking points are.
They also usually keep track of your methods and classes which will appear in lists - and the better ones extract your documentation comments so when you start typing the name of a method you defined the auto-complete will suggest your own methods (not just the standard ruby ones) and also display your own documentation comments.
And lots more in terms of keeping track of your files etc. Usually more useful for larger projects - but I have some plugins where I'd really like an intelligent IDE instead of just simple syntax colouring. -
@chris fullmer said:
just using Notepad++ to write scripts?
Chrismy recent endeavors to find the mysterious Mac 'bug' that appears to affect some scripts and not others and some Macs and not others, led me to a number of blogs about MS'Dos' debris causing issues, when I cleaned and reformatted using Unix Line Delimiters as suggested (as apposed to PC or Mac specific) some of the script worked without additional work, while there seemingly identical originals still didn't...
So I started looking for a powerful cross platform alternative to what I was using and free, open-source seemed sensible.
the problem lays in setting them up so they are as easy to use as the less complex ones when starting out, but are readily expanded as you pick up, mix in other languages etc...
This appears to meet my criteria, but maybe I should have an easy start list at the top of the thread that can be added to over time??
Give it a go, my first tip is Download Studio first, then let it download Rad Rails, which also contains RUBY, then set ruby prefs from there.
@Martin-is this what you mean?http://www.vimeo.com/6885985
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@driven said:
... when I cleaned and reformatted using Unix Line Delimiters as suggested (as apposed to PC or Mac specific) some of the script worked without additional work, while there seemingly identical originals still didn't...
So Notepad++ has 3 options for EOL (which is apparentley auto set on install for the platform the user is on.) On my PC, it was set to 'Windows'.
The other options are 'Mac' and 'UNIX'.
IF UNIX EOLs work on Mac, how does it work for Ruby on a PC??
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@dan rathbun said:
IF UNIX EOLs work on Mac, how does it work for Ruby on a PC??
That I don't know, I was attempting to modify PC rubies to work on the Mac.... although I did send a couple back to one developer who then ran them on his PC... be handy if they do, I suppose one way to check is if you switch coding on something known to work on your PC and see if it still does... I'm by no means saying that notepad causes all problems, or that changing encode is a miracle cure, but it seems that it is capable of producing errors, and is probably a good place to start when debugging , it's easy.....
Have you had a look at this editor/IDE?
john
PS, I've also set up SU on XP pro SP3 on one mac, but as it unix under the skin it may not be the best test bed...
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