Ruby Weekly News 7th - 13th November 2005

Posted by Tsela on Nov 15, 2005 4:13 AM EDT
RubyWeeklyNews.org; By Tim Sutherland
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Ruby Weekly News is a summary of the week's activity on the ruby-talk mailing list / comp.lang.ruby newsgroup, brought to you by Tim Sutherland, with contributions from Christophe Grandsire.

http://www.rubyweeklynews.org/20051113.html

Ruby Weekly News 7th - 13th November 2005 =========================================

Ruby Weekly News is a summary of the week's activity on the ruby-talk mailing list / comp.lang.ruby newsgroup, brought to you by Tim Sutherland, with contributions from Christophe Grandsire.

[Contribute to the next newsletter.]

Articles and Announcements ==========================

* Why the Lucky Stiff (again!) on Noboto ----------------------------------------

As Raymond Brigleb intoned, the latest Noboto video-blog features Why the Lucky Stiff's soundtrack to Chapter 6 of the Poignant Guide - "The Belljar, the Space, and My Daughter's Organ Instructor". This follows the previous week's interview with Why.

* RubyForge milestone ---------------------

Tom Copeland announced that RubyForge had reached 1000 hosted projects with the addition of Joseph Tremblay's Rolling Gemstone.

"Here's to the next 1000 projects!"

* Red: The Ruby Journal, a professional periodical for Ruby developers ----------------------------------------------------------------------

M. Samuel "Flywheel" Streicher announced a commercial journal for Ruby developers.

| The journal, tentatively titled "Red," will be published monthly and | will be distributed internationally as a stylish, high-quality, 60- | page PDF. Each month, Red will focus on boosting the skills and | productivity of all Ruby programmers-from novices to gurus- | providing pragmatic, practical, insightful, hands-on, and diverse | advice and expertise. | | Contributors will be paid for material accepted and published in the | journal. Like other journals, all material will be vetted by peers | and experts prior to publication.

Those interested in subscribing, writing articles, regular columns or advertising are invited to contact Samuel.

Bill Guindon: "Ok, 10 points for the most ambitious 1st post I've ever seen on any mailing list".

There was some discussion about the name of the journal. Pat Eyler popularly suggested 'Red Letter', "for no other reason that every time you get your copy, it will be a red letter day".

* how the move from pdp-11 assembler to ruby took steve jenkins' breath ----------------------------------------------------------------------- away ------

This week SciRuby interviews Steve Jenkins, Principal Engineer at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory of the California Institute of Technology.

"[SciRuby] What programming accomplishment are you most proud of?"

| I wrote some code back in the early 1990s that ended up being used, | at least as a design concept, in the engineering effort to save the | Galileo mission to Jupiter after the spacecraft's high-gain antenna | failed to deploy. It wasn't particularly advanced programming, but | it was in the right place at the right time. Solving that problem is | part of the reason the Deep Space Network converted to a TCP/IP | network infrastructure when they did.

* Ruby Forum ------------

Andreas Schwarz created web forums mirroring the ruby-talk and rails mailing lists.

There are now (at least) four ways to read and post: through the ruby-talk list, the comp.lang.ruby newsgroup, the gmane.comp.lang.ruby.general interface or the Ruby forum.

See also Andreas' earlier post [Mailing list <-> web forum gateway].

* Permathreads --------------

James Britt created the page [RubyTalkPermaThreads] on the RubyGarden wiki to keep track of threads that keep popping up all the time.

| I encourage folks with knowledge of particular areas to add | resources so that at least when certain (very) familiar topics rear | their heads every few months people can avoid rehashing the same | basic stuff.

User Group News ===============

* Refresh Phoenix (AKA Not-quite Phoenix.rb) --------------------------------------------

James Britt announced the first "Refresh Phoenix" (Arizona) meeting, "a community of designers and developers working to refresh the creative, technical, and professional culture of Internet developers in the Phoenix metropolitan area" - held November 8th.

The second meeting is on the 6th of December.

* Ruby Group Meeting in Montreal --------------------------------

David Vincelli announced a meeting on November 9th in Montreal, with a presentation on Rails, and perhaps more.

* new_haven.rb Unit Testing Slideshow now online ------------------------------------------------

Gregory Brown posted his slides on unit testing from the new_haven.rb meeting (New Haven Ruby Brigade, in Connecticut, U.S.). The Takahashi method is here.

He also said they're planning to start putting up audio recordings of their meetings, and maybe run IRC during them.

* Typo chat, BBQ dinner (Sunnyvale, CA), 11/10, 7 pm ----------------------------------------------------

Rich Morin forwarded a message announcing a meeting with Scott Laird, "a developer for Typo (blog software written in Ruby on Rails)" at a BBQ Dinner in the San Francisco Bay Area.

Image of the Week =================

"Leaf", by Jeff Kubina ----------------------

What a pity you aren't looking at the web view of this newsletter. http://www.rubyweeklynews.org/20051113.html

(Send your suggestions in for next week's image.)

Threads =======

Function Variable and Return Value References ---------------------------------------------

Eric Hofreiter was confused about the semantics of variable passing and return values in Ruby, wondering in which case those were done by reference or by value.

| At first, I thought variables were always pointers, and things such as | a = b meant that if you change a, you change b. It seems now that this | is in fact never the case.

Hal Fulton explained that Eric had a few misunderstandings concerning variables, which except in cases of "immediate" objects do hold references to objects, and with assignment, which only binds a variable to an object.

| So any operation that actually changes the object will behave as you | expect.

a = "Hello" a = b b << " there!" puts a # "Hello there!" puts b # "Hello there!"

| However, any operation that binds a variable to a new/different object | won't show that effect.

a = "Hello" a = b b += " there!" puts a # "Hello" puts b # "Hello there!"

| You might think at first glance that x << y and x += y do the same thing | for strings. And indeed they result in the same value. | | But x += y is just syntax sugar for x = x + y (i.e., they mean exactly | the same thing). So += is actually an assignment, and thus doesn't | change an object-it just binds a variable to a new or different object.

Eric Mahurin added a line-by-line comparison between Hal's example and the equivalent in C++, to illustrate the semantics of assignment, and indicated that variables in Ruby are lightweight, which makes it easy to optimise them but difficult to get a reference to the variables themselves.

Index and Query (#54) --------------------

This week's Ruby Quiz (by Lyndon Samson) challenges you to build a simple indexer/query system for finding words in text documents.

As usual, anyone can take part and post their solution after the 48-hour "no-spoiler" period, which is followed by discussions around the different approaches.

Numeric <=> -----------

ChrisH asked why Numeric implements <=> so it returns 0 or nil, rather than the usual -1, 0 and 1, while it also includes Comparable. Eric Hodel replied that Numeric being an abstract class, its subclasses just need to override the spaceship operator appropriately, but the question remained why it should be implemented at all. As Robert Klemme said:

| Including Comparable is not a reason IMHO because that will break either | way (i.e. with missing <=> and with incomplete implemented <=>).

This was followed by a discussion about whether having the safety net of a partially implemented <=> was better than simply raising an "undefined method" error when performing a comparison (or a sort). The opinions on the subject were divided and no clear conclusion came out.

Rubyholic ---------

"What's rubyholic?", asked Joe Van Dyk.

JB Eriksson explained that it's someone who consumes large quantities of rubyhol.

If you experience three or more of the following in the same 12-month period, then you may be a rubyholic:

* You write larger amounts of Ruby code, or over a longer period than intended. * Your Ruby coding interferes with family, friends, or job. * You develop tolerance, meaning that over time it takes [more concise code] to satisfy you than it used to. * You experience withdrawal, meaning that you have unpleasant symptoms if you stop coding Ruby.

If you're ready to ask for help, then start by seeing if there is a [rubyholics group] in your area. There you can share your experiences with others who are going through the same challenges.

Better way to build string --------------------------

Marcus asked for a better way to write the following code:

def build_query_string(properties, prop_type) result = ""

properties.each do |item| if prop_type == "tag" result += " #{item.name}=#{item.value}" else if result == "" result = "?" else result += "&" end result += "#{item.name}=#{item.value}" end end

result end

Peter Ertl gave a nice solution using map and join:

def build_query_string(properties, prop_type) query = properties.map {|p| "#{p.name}=#{p.value}"} case prop_type when "tag": (" " + query.join(" ")) else ("?" + query.join("&")) end end

In general, it's clearer to use declarative methods like map and join rather than each-with-side-effects.

RFC: Audio ----------

Hans Fugal noticed a lot of people asking audio questions about Ruby, and felt that this was an area where Ruby still needs a lot of work.

To this end, he began working on wrapping "libsndfile, libsamplerate, and possibly portaudio. Combined with ladspar, midilib, and other ruby audio libs that exist, this should get us well on the way."

He is likely to run the project under the SciRuby site. "About me: I'm a PhD student in Computer Science who finally gets to say that music and audio stuff is on-topic, as my research area is Computer Music."

Hugh Sasse noted that Python has for some time included audio libraries in its standard library, and suggested these could be used for inspiration.

ruby-dev summary 27542-27662 ----------------------------

Kazuo Saito summarised the latest discussions from the Japanese list ruby-dev.

Among the issues discussed was a request for people to test the 1.8.4 preview1 build and unit tests on a variety of platforms.

New Releases ============

setuidruby-1.0.0 ----------------

Ara.T.Howard posted a program for running Ruby as a selectable user on unix systems, with e.g. setuidruby ahoward ./a.rb.

RubyCocoa 0.4.2 ---------------

Kimura Wataru released RubyCocoa 0.4.2, the bindings to Mac OS X's Cocoa framework.

It now works with Mac OS X 10.4 and 10.3, and continues to work on 10.2. "Core Data" support was added.

Ruby Web Bench 0.0.0 (RWB) -------------------------

Pat Eyler created a new web performance / load testing tool as an alternative to Apache's ab, featuring the ability to thrash a weighted list of URLs.

Bob Hutchison: "This looks really quite handy-I think I've had the same issues as you have had with ab."

0.0.1 and 0.0.2 were later released. The latter added warmup support.

Stomp Client Release --------------------

Brian McCallister released 1.0.0 of a client for "Stomp" (a text-oriented messaging protocol, "Message Oriented Middleware" if you will).

Jim Freeze asked how it was different to DRb, and Brian explained "DRb is a synchronous RPC style system whereas stomp is asynchronous message passing (though you can ask for a reply)."

Net::DICT 0.9.0 ---------------

Nikolai Weibull announced a client-side implementation of the Dictionary Server Protocol (RFC2229).

Ruby/ZOOM 0.2.2 ---------------

Laurent Sansonetti's Ruby/ZOOM was updated, fixing a couple of bugs in ZOOM::Query.

| Ruby/ZOOM provides a Ruby binding to the Z39.50 Object-Orientation Model | (ZOOM), an abstract object-oriented programming interface to a subset of | the services specified by the Z39.50 standard, also known as the | international standard ISO 23950.

CommandLine-0.7.9 Update ------------------------

Jim Freeze's CommandLine library now features a lower-case gem name, new documentation and a refined API.

lockfile-1.4.0 --------------

Ara.T.Howard added a gem, and a method for atomically creating and opening a file, to lockfile, "a ruby library for creating NFS safe lockfiles".

TeSLa 0.2.0 is out ------------------

Obscured by code announced the release of TeSLa version 0.2.0. Among many changes, TeSLa is now able to handle Test-Driven Development by failing gracefully when a tested method doesn't exist yet. A full release article can be found here.

TeSLa is a DSL devoted to unit testing.

eric3 3.8.0 released --------------------

Detlev Offenbach released eric3 version 3.8.0. eric3 is a Python and Ruby IDE written in Python.

KirbyBase 2.4 -------------

Jamey Cribbs set out KirbyBase 2.4, a pure-Ruby database management system that uses plain-text files.

Memos and Blobs are now writable, many-many associations can be defined, the manual was extensively revised, and more.

Ezra Zygmuntowicz: "I really love kirbybase as a lightweight pure ruby db. Keep up the great work Jamie!"

Net::SSH 1.0.3 --------------

A Windows-specific maintenance release of Net::SSH fixes a problem with connections failing when the PuTTy pageant was not running.

Jamis Buck's Net::SSH is "a pure-Ruby implementation of the SSH2 client protocol, allowing Ruby scripts to interact with remote processes via SSH."

Ruport 0.2.0 ------------

Gregory Brown introduced the second version of Ruport, "the release that was just supposed to be minor bug fixes but exploded into a whole lot more" (the API was completely redesigned).

This release was followed three days later by minor update 0.2.2. This update is a bug fix and clean up of the codebase.

Ruport is a pure-Ruby report generation framework.

SMC - State Machine Compiler v. 4.3.0 -------------------------------------

Charles Rapp announced the latest version of the State Machine Compiler (SMC) which takes a file describing a state machine and outputs code to implement it in a variety of languages, including Ruby.

Rails 1.0 RC4 (0.14.3): It's the final countdown! -------------------------------------------------

David Heinemeier Hansson announced the (hopefully) final preview of Rails before version 1.0.

[ TEST ME | TEST ME | TEST ME | TEST ME | TEST ME | TEST ME | TEST ME ]

| Comrades, we are so close to the goal that the relieve should be | tastable. The mythical 1.0 release is now penned to be the very next | release once we rattle out the heinous bugs from this one. So we need | every man, woman, and child at work testing the living daylights out of | this final release candidate. Upgrade your apps, start new ones, kick | the tires, rev the engine, do it all!

Many additions were made, despite the last-preview status. They include the use of lighttpd in development mode if it is available (automatically run through script/server), script/plugin to help manage plugins, more ActiveRecord dynamic finder goodness, "extensions for association collections" (so you can do e.g. account.people.my_method), redirect_to :back, and more.

Oh yeah, and upgrading is easier, so there are no excuses.

Now how about getting ready for some Rails Release Parties?

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