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LinkBack | Outils de la discussion |
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#1 |
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Messages: n/a
Hébergeur: |
LogBuddy is your friendly little log buddy at your side, ing you
dev, debug, and test. It plays well with Rails and plain old Ruby projects. To use it, sudo gem install log_buddy, then require 'log_buddy' and call LogBuddy.init. It will add two methods to object instance and class level: "d" and "logger". You probably only want to use these in non-prod environments, so conditionally load it based on your test env. The "logger" method is just a typical logger - it will use the Rails logger if its available. The "d" method is a special er that will output the code in the block and its result - note that you *must* use the bracket block form - do...end is not supported. Examples ======= require 'lib/log_buddy' LogBuddy.init a = "foo" @a = "my var" @@bar = "class var!" def bark "woof!" end module Foo; def self.module_method "hi!!" end end d { a } # logs "a = 'foo'" d { @a } # logs "@a = 'my var'" d { @@bar } # logs "@@bar = 'class var!'" d { bark } # logs "bark = woof!" d { Foo::module_method } # logs Foo::module_method = 'hi!!' More ==== Log bugs/issues/suggestions here: http://opensource.thinkrelevance.com/wiki/log_buddy Source: http://github.com/relevance/log_buddy/tree/master git clone git://github.com/relevance/log_buddy.git rdocs: http://thinkrelevance.rubyforge.org/log_buddy/ Thanks ====== Thanks to Dave Thomas and his latest testing code for the idea of simple reading the file based on the call stack to easily output the log line. Thanks to Muness Alrubaie for pairing. - Rob http://robsanheim.com http://thinkrelevance.com |
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#2 |
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Messages: n/a
Hébergeur: |
Chad Perrin wrote:
> The growing ubiquity of all administrative commands being explained with > a "sudo" at the front, as if everyone in the world uses sudo for all > administrative commands, is getting kinda old. > > 1. Some people use MS Windows. > > 2. Some people use MacOS X. > > 3. Some people use su or just login as root from the TTY console. > > The common thread here is that not everyone in the world is using Ubuntu. 4. Some people use ubuntu, but chown -R /usr/local to their own user. (On my laptop, anyway!) Never have to "sudo gem". -- vjoel : Joel VanderWerf : path berkeley edu : 510 665 3407 |
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#3 |
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Messages: n/a
Hébergeur: |
Erm, Mac OS X uses sudo...
--Jeremy On Mon, Mar 31, 2008 at 12:41 AM, Chad Perrin <perrin@apotheon.com> wrote: > On Mon, Mar 31, 2008 at 12:47:20PM +0900, Rob Sanheim wrote: > > LogBuddy is your friendly little log buddy at your side, ing you > > dev, debug, and test. It plays well with Rails and plain old Ruby > > projects. To use it, sudo gem install log_buddy, then require > > 'log_buddy' and call LogBuddy.init. It will add two methods to object > > instance and class level: "d" and "logger". You probably only want to > > use these in non-prod environments, so conditionally load it based on > > your test env. > > The growing ubiquity of all administrative commands being explained with > a "sudo" at the front, as if everyone in the world uses sudo for all > administrative commands, is getting kinda old. > > 1. Some people use MS Windows. > > 2. Some people use MacOS X. > > 3. Some people use su or just login as root from the TTY console. > > The common thread here is that not everyone in the world is using Ubuntu. > > . . . but LogBuddy looks interesting. I might have to give that a whirl > in the near future. Thanks. > > -- > CCD CopyWrite Chad Perrin [ http://ccd.apotheon.org ] > Thomas McCauley: "The measure of a man's real character is what he would do > if he knew he would never be found out." > -- http://jeremymcanally.com/ http://entp.com Read my books: Ruby in Practice (http://manning.com/mcanally/) My free Ruby e-book (http://humblelittlerubybook.com/) Or, my blogs: http://mrneighborly.com http://rubyinpractice.com |
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