eav_hashes 1.0.1 → 1.0.2

Sign up to get free protection for your applications and to get access to all the features.
Files changed (55) hide show
  1. checksums.yaml +7 -0
  2. data/MIT-LICENSE +20 -20
  3. data/README.md +147 -147
  4. data/Rakefile +30 -30
  5. data/lib/eav_hashes/activerecord_extension.rb +37 -37
  6. data/lib/eav_hashes/eav_entry.rb +128 -128
  7. data/lib/eav_hashes/eav_hash.rb +167 -167
  8. data/lib/eav_hashes/util.rb +122 -122
  9. data/lib/eav_hashes/version.rb +5 -5
  10. data/lib/eav_hashes.rb +8 -8
  11. data/lib/generators/eav_migration/USAGE +26 -26
  12. data/lib/generators/eav_migration/eav_migration.rb +35 -35
  13. data/lib/generators/eav_migration/templates/eav_migration.erb +15 -15
  14. data/spec/dummy/README.rdoc +261 -261
  15. data/spec/dummy/Rakefile +7 -7
  16. data/spec/dummy/app/assets/javascripts/application.js +15 -15
  17. data/spec/dummy/app/assets/stylesheets/application.css +13 -13
  18. data/spec/dummy/app/controllers/application_controller.rb +3 -3
  19. data/spec/dummy/app/helpers/application_helper.rb +2 -2
  20. data/spec/dummy/app/models/custom_test_object.rb +6 -6
  21. data/spec/dummy/app/models/product.rb +3 -4
  22. data/spec/dummy/app/views/layouts/application.html.erb +14 -14
  23. data/spec/dummy/config/application.rb +62 -68
  24. data/spec/dummy/config/boot.rb +9 -9
  25. data/spec/dummy/config/database.yml +25 -25
  26. data/spec/dummy/config/environment.rb +5 -5
  27. data/spec/dummy/config/environments/development.rb +34 -37
  28. data/spec/dummy/config/environments/production.rb +70 -67
  29. data/spec/dummy/config/environments/test.rb +34 -37
  30. data/spec/dummy/config/initializers/backtrace_silencers.rb +7 -7
  31. data/spec/dummy/config/initializers/inflections.rb +15 -15
  32. data/spec/dummy/config/initializers/mime_types.rb +5 -5
  33. data/spec/dummy/config/initializers/secret_token.rb +7 -7
  34. data/spec/dummy/config/initializers/session_store.rb +8 -8
  35. data/spec/dummy/config/initializers/wrap_parameters.rb +14 -14
  36. data/spec/dummy/config/locales/en.yml +5 -5
  37. data/spec/dummy/config/routes.rb +58 -58
  38. data/spec/dummy/config.ru +4 -4
  39. data/spec/dummy/db/migrate/20121206133059_create_products.rb +9 -9
  40. data/spec/dummy/db/migrate/20121210055854_create_product_tech_specs.rb +15 -15
  41. data/spec/dummy/db/seeds.rb +30 -30
  42. data/spec/dummy/public/404.html +26 -26
  43. data/spec/dummy/public/422.html +26 -26
  44. data/spec/dummy/public/500.html +25 -25
  45. data/spec/dummy/script/rails +6 -6
  46. data/spec/lib/eav_hashes/eav_hash_spec.rb +147 -137
  47. data/spec/lib/generators/eav_migration_spec.rb +60 -60
  48. data/spec/spec_helper.rb +24 -24
  49. metadata +25 -44
  50. data/spec/dummy/db/development.sqlite3 +0 -0
  51. data/spec/dummy/db/schema.rb +0 -35
  52. data/spec/dummy/db/test.sqlite3 +0 -0
  53. data/spec/dummy/log/ENV=test.log +0 -1
  54. data/spec/dummy/log/development.log +0 -46
  55. data/spec/dummy/log/test.log +0 -4623
@@ -1,261 +1,261 @@
1
- == Welcome to Rails
2
-
3
- Rails is a web-application framework that includes everything needed to create
4
- database-backed web applications according to the Model-View-Control pattern.
5
-
6
- This pattern splits the view (also called the presentation) into "dumb"
7
- templates that are primarily responsible for inserting pre-built data in between
8
- HTML tags. The model contains the "smart" domain objects (such as Account,
9
- Product, Person, Post) that holds all the business logic and knows how to
10
- persist themselves to a database. The controller handles the incoming requests
11
- (such as Save New Account, Update Product, Show Post) by manipulating the model
12
- and directing data to the view.
13
-
14
- In Rails, the model is handled by what's called an object-relational mapping
15
- layer entitled Active Record. This layer allows you to present the data from
16
- database rows as objects and embellish these data objects with business logic
17
- methods. You can read more about Active Record in
18
- link:files/vendor/rails/activerecord/README.html.
19
-
20
- The controller and view are handled by the Action Pack, which handles both
21
- layers by its two parts: Action View and Action Controller. These two layers
22
- are bundled in a single package due to their heavy interdependence. This is
23
- unlike the relationship between the Active Record and Action Pack that is much
24
- more separate. Each of these packages can be used independently outside of
25
- Rails. You can read more about Action Pack in
26
- link:files/vendor/rails/actionpack/README.html.
27
-
28
-
29
- == Getting Started
30
-
31
- 1. At the command prompt, create a new Rails application:
32
- <tt>rails new myapp</tt> (where <tt>myapp</tt> is the application name)
33
-
34
- 2. Change directory to <tt>myapp</tt> and start the web server:
35
- <tt>cd myapp; rails server</tt> (run with --help for options)
36
-
37
- 3. Go to http://localhost:3000/ and you'll see:
38
- "Welcome aboard: You're riding Ruby on Rails!"
39
-
40
- 4. Follow the guidelines to start developing your application. You can find
41
- the following resources handy:
42
-
43
- * The Getting Started Guide: http://guides.rubyonrails.org/getting_started.html
44
- * Ruby on Rails Tutorial Book: http://www.railstutorial.org/
45
-
46
-
47
- == Debugging Rails
48
-
49
- Sometimes your application goes wrong. Fortunately there are a lot of tools that
50
- will help you debug it and get it back on the rails.
51
-
52
- First area to check is the application log files. Have "tail -f" commands
53
- running on the server.log and development.log. Rails will automatically display
54
- debugging and runtime information to these files. Debugging info will also be
55
- shown in the browser on requests from 127.0.0.1.
56
-
57
- You can also log your own messages directly into the log file from your code
58
- using the Ruby logger class from inside your controllers. Example:
59
-
60
- class WeblogController < ActionController::Base
61
- def destroy
62
- @weblog = Weblog.find(params[:id])
63
- @weblog.destroy
64
- logger.info("#{Time.now} Destroyed Weblog ID ##{@weblog.id}!")
65
- end
66
- end
67
-
68
- The result will be a message in your log file along the lines of:
69
-
70
- Mon Oct 08 14:22:29 +1000 2007 Destroyed Weblog ID #1!
71
-
72
- More information on how to use the logger is at http://www.ruby-doc.org/core/
73
-
74
- Also, Ruby documentation can be found at http://www.ruby-lang.org/. There are
75
- several books available online as well:
76
-
77
- * Programming Ruby: http://www.ruby-doc.org/docs/ProgrammingRuby/ (Pickaxe)
78
- * Learn to Program: http://pine.fm/LearnToProgram/ (a beginners guide)
79
-
80
- These two books will bring you up to speed on the Ruby language and also on
81
- programming in general.
82
-
83
-
84
- == Debugger
85
-
86
- Debugger support is available through the debugger command when you start your
87
- Mongrel or WEBrick server with --debugger. This means that you can break out of
88
- execution at any point in the code, investigate and change the model, and then,
89
- resume execution! You need to install ruby-debug to run the server in debugging
90
- mode. With gems, use <tt>sudo gem install ruby-debug</tt>. Example:
91
-
92
- class WeblogController < ActionController::Base
93
- def index
94
- @posts = Post.all
95
- debugger
96
- end
97
- end
98
-
99
- So the controller will accept the action, run the first line, then present you
100
- with a IRB prompt in the server window. Here you can do things like:
101
-
102
- >> @posts.inspect
103
- => "[#<Post:0x14a6be8
104
- @attributes={"title"=>nil, "body"=>nil, "id"=>"1"}>,
105
- #<Post:0x14a6620
106
- @attributes={"title"=>"Rails", "body"=>"Only ten..", "id"=>"2"}>]"
107
- >> @posts.first.title = "hello from a debugger"
108
- => "hello from a debugger"
109
-
110
- ...and even better, you can examine how your runtime objects actually work:
111
-
112
- >> f = @posts.first
113
- => #<Post:0x13630c4 @attributes={"title"=>nil, "body"=>nil, "id"=>"1"}>
114
- >> f.
115
- Display all 152 possibilities? (y or n)
116
-
117
- Finally, when you're ready to resume execution, you can enter "cont".
118
-
119
-
120
- == Console
121
-
122
- The console is a Ruby shell, which allows you to interact with your
123
- application's domain model. Here you'll have all parts of the application
124
- configured, just like it is when the application is running. You can inspect
125
- domain models, change values, and save to the database. Starting the script
126
- without arguments will launch it in the development environment.
127
-
128
- To start the console, run <tt>rails console</tt> from the application
129
- directory.
130
-
131
- Options:
132
-
133
- * Passing the <tt>-s, --sandbox</tt> argument will rollback any modifications
134
- made to the database.
135
- * Passing an environment name as an argument will load the corresponding
136
- environment. Example: <tt>rails console production</tt>.
137
-
138
- To reload your controllers and models after launching the console run
139
- <tt>reload!</tt>
140
-
141
- More information about irb can be found at:
142
- link:http://www.rubycentral.org/pickaxe/irb.html
143
-
144
-
145
- == dbconsole
146
-
147
- You can go to the command line of your database directly through <tt>rails
148
- dbconsole</tt>. You would be connected to the database with the credentials
149
- defined in database.yml. Starting the script without arguments will connect you
150
- to the development database. Passing an argument will connect you to a different
151
- database, like <tt>rails dbconsole production</tt>. Currently works for MySQL,
152
- PostgreSQL and SQLite 3.
153
-
154
- == Description of Contents
155
-
156
- The default directory structure of a generated Ruby on Rails application:
157
-
158
- |-- app
159
- | |-- assets
160
- | |-- images
161
- | |-- javascripts
162
- | `-- stylesheets
163
- | |-- controllers
164
- | |-- helpers
165
- | |-- mailers
166
- | |-- models
167
- | `-- views
168
- | `-- layouts
169
- |-- config
170
- | |-- environments
171
- | |-- initializers
172
- | `-- locales
173
- |-- db
174
- |-- doc
175
- |-- lib
176
- | `-- tasks
177
- |-- log
178
- |-- public
179
- |-- script
180
- |-- test
181
- | |-- fixtures
182
- | |-- functional
183
- | |-- integration
184
- | |-- performance
185
- | `-- unit
186
- |-- tmp
187
- | |-- cache
188
- | |-- pids
189
- | |-- sessions
190
- | `-- sockets
191
- `-- vendor
192
- |-- assets
193
- `-- stylesheets
194
- `-- plugins
195
-
196
- app
197
- Holds all the code that's specific to this particular application.
198
-
199
- app/assets
200
- Contains subdirectories for images, stylesheets, and JavaScript files.
201
-
202
- app/controllers
203
- Holds controllers that should be named like weblogs_controller.rb for
204
- automated URL mapping. All controllers should descend from
205
- ApplicationController which itself descends from ActionController::Base.
206
-
207
- app/models
208
- Holds models that should be named like post.rb. Models descend from
209
- ActiveRecord::Base by default.
210
-
211
- app/views
212
- Holds the template files for the view that should be named like
213
- weblogs/index.html.erb for the WeblogsController#index action. All views use
214
- eRuby syntax by default.
215
-
216
- app/views/layouts
217
- Holds the template files for layouts to be used with views. This models the
218
- common header/footer method of wrapping views. In your views, define a layout
219
- using the <tt>layout :default</tt> and create a file named default.html.erb.
220
- Inside default.html.erb, call <% yield %> to render the view using this
221
- layout.
222
-
223
- app/helpers
224
- Holds view helpers that should be named like weblogs_helper.rb. These are
225
- generated for you automatically when using generators for controllers.
226
- Helpers can be used to wrap functionality for your views into methods.
227
-
228
- config
229
- Configuration files for the Rails environment, the routing map, the database,
230
- and other dependencies.
231
-
232
- db
233
- Contains the database schema in schema.rb. db/migrate contains all the
234
- sequence of Migrations for your schema.
235
-
236
- doc
237
- This directory is where your application documentation will be stored when
238
- generated using <tt>rake doc:app</tt>
239
-
240
- lib
241
- Application specific libraries. Basically, any kind of custom code that
242
- doesn't belong under controllers, models, or helpers. This directory is in
243
- the load path.
244
-
245
- public
246
- The directory available for the web server. Also contains the dispatchers and the
247
- default HTML files. This should be set as the DOCUMENT_ROOT of your web
248
- server.
249
-
250
- script
251
- Helper scripts for automation and generation.
252
-
253
- test
254
- Unit and functional tests along with fixtures. When using the rails generate
255
- command, template test files will be generated for you and placed in this
256
- directory.
257
-
258
- vendor
259
- External libraries that the application depends on. Also includes the plugins
260
- subdirectory. If the app has frozen rails, those gems also go here, under
261
- vendor/rails/. This directory is in the load path.
1
+ == Welcome to Rails
2
+
3
+ Rails is a web-application framework that includes everything needed to create
4
+ database-backed web applications according to the Model-View-Control pattern.
5
+
6
+ This pattern splits the view (also called the presentation) into "dumb"
7
+ templates that are primarily responsible for inserting pre-built data in between
8
+ HTML tags. The model contains the "smart" domain objects (such as Account,
9
+ Product, Person, Post) that holds all the business logic and knows how to
10
+ persist themselves to a database. The controller handles the incoming requests
11
+ (such as Save New Account, Update Product, Show Post) by manipulating the model
12
+ and directing data to the view.
13
+
14
+ In Rails, the model is handled by what's called an object-relational mapping
15
+ layer entitled Active Record. This layer allows you to present the data from
16
+ database rows as objects and embellish these data objects with business logic
17
+ methods. You can read more about Active Record in
18
+ link:files/vendor/rails/activerecord/README.html.
19
+
20
+ The controller and view are handled by the Action Pack, which handles both
21
+ layers by its two parts: Action View and Action Controller. These two layers
22
+ are bundled in a single package due to their heavy interdependence. This is
23
+ unlike the relationship between the Active Record and Action Pack that is much
24
+ more separate. Each of these packages can be used independently outside of
25
+ Rails. You can read more about Action Pack in
26
+ link:files/vendor/rails/actionpack/README.html.
27
+
28
+
29
+ == Getting Started
30
+
31
+ 1. At the command prompt, create a new Rails application:
32
+ <tt>rails new myapp</tt> (where <tt>myapp</tt> is the application name)
33
+
34
+ 2. Change directory to <tt>myapp</tt> and start the web server:
35
+ <tt>cd myapp; rails server</tt> (run with --help for options)
36
+
37
+ 3. Go to http://localhost:3000/ and you'll see:
38
+ "Welcome aboard: You're riding Ruby on Rails!"
39
+
40
+ 4. Follow the guidelines to start developing your application. You can find
41
+ the following resources handy:
42
+
43
+ * The Getting Started Guide: http://guides.rubyonrails.org/getting_started.html
44
+ * Ruby on Rails Tutorial Book: http://www.railstutorial.org/
45
+
46
+
47
+ == Debugging Rails
48
+
49
+ Sometimes your application goes wrong. Fortunately there are a lot of tools that
50
+ will help you debug it and get it back on the rails.
51
+
52
+ First area to check is the application log files. Have "tail -f" commands
53
+ running on the server.log and development.log. Rails will automatically display
54
+ debugging and runtime information to these files. Debugging info will also be
55
+ shown in the browser on requests from 127.0.0.1.
56
+
57
+ You can also log your own messages directly into the log file from your code
58
+ using the Ruby logger class from inside your controllers. Example:
59
+
60
+ class WeblogController < ActionController::Base
61
+ def destroy
62
+ @weblog = Weblog.find(params[:id])
63
+ @weblog.destroy
64
+ logger.info("#{Time.now} Destroyed Weblog ID ##{@weblog.id}!")
65
+ end
66
+ end
67
+
68
+ The result will be a message in your log file along the lines of:
69
+
70
+ Mon Oct 08 14:22:29 +1000 2007 Destroyed Weblog ID #1!
71
+
72
+ More information on how to use the logger is at http://www.ruby-doc.org/core/
73
+
74
+ Also, Ruby documentation can be found at http://www.ruby-lang.org/. There are
75
+ several books available online as well:
76
+
77
+ * Programming Ruby: http://www.ruby-doc.org/docs/ProgrammingRuby/ (Pickaxe)
78
+ * Learn to Program: http://pine.fm/LearnToProgram/ (a beginners guide)
79
+
80
+ These two books will bring you up to speed on the Ruby language and also on
81
+ programming in general.
82
+
83
+
84
+ == Debugger
85
+
86
+ Debugger support is available through the debugger command when you start your
87
+ Mongrel or WEBrick server with --debugger. This means that you can break out of
88
+ execution at any point in the code, investigate and change the model, and then,
89
+ resume execution! You need to install ruby-debug to run the server in debugging
90
+ mode. With gems, use <tt>sudo gem install ruby-debug</tt>. Example:
91
+
92
+ class WeblogController < ActionController::Base
93
+ def index
94
+ @posts = Post.all
95
+ debugger
96
+ end
97
+ end
98
+
99
+ So the controller will accept the action, run the first line, then present you
100
+ with a IRB prompt in the server window. Here you can do things like:
101
+
102
+ >> @posts.inspect
103
+ => "[#<Post:0x14a6be8
104
+ @attributes={"title"=>nil, "body"=>nil, "id"=>"1"}>,
105
+ #<Post:0x14a6620
106
+ @attributes={"title"=>"Rails", "body"=>"Only ten..", "id"=>"2"}>]"
107
+ >> @posts.first.title = "hello from a debugger"
108
+ => "hello from a debugger"
109
+
110
+ ...and even better, you can examine how your runtime objects actually work:
111
+
112
+ >> f = @posts.first
113
+ => #<Post:0x13630c4 @attributes={"title"=>nil, "body"=>nil, "id"=>"1"}>
114
+ >> f.
115
+ Display all 152 possibilities? (y or n)
116
+
117
+ Finally, when you're ready to resume execution, you can enter "cont".
118
+
119
+
120
+ == Console
121
+
122
+ The console is a Ruby shell, which allows you to interact with your
123
+ application's domain model. Here you'll have all parts of the application
124
+ configured, just like it is when the application is running. You can inspect
125
+ domain models, change values, and save to the database. Starting the script
126
+ without arguments will launch it in the development environment.
127
+
128
+ To start the console, run <tt>rails console</tt> from the application
129
+ directory.
130
+
131
+ Options:
132
+
133
+ * Passing the <tt>-s, --sandbox</tt> argument will rollback any modifications
134
+ made to the database.
135
+ * Passing an environment name as an argument will load the corresponding
136
+ environment. Example: <tt>rails console production</tt>.
137
+
138
+ To reload your controllers and models after launching the console run
139
+ <tt>reload!</tt>
140
+
141
+ More information about irb can be found at:
142
+ link:http://www.rubycentral.org/pickaxe/irb.html
143
+
144
+
145
+ == dbconsole
146
+
147
+ You can go to the command line of your database directly through <tt>rails
148
+ dbconsole</tt>. You would be connected to the database with the credentials
149
+ defined in database.yml. Starting the script without arguments will connect you
150
+ to the development database. Passing an argument will connect you to a different
151
+ database, like <tt>rails dbconsole production</tt>. Currently works for MySQL,
152
+ PostgreSQL and SQLite 3.
153
+
154
+ == Description of Contents
155
+
156
+ The default directory structure of a generated Ruby on Rails application:
157
+
158
+ |-- app
159
+ | |-- assets
160
+ | |-- images
161
+ | |-- javascripts
162
+ | `-- stylesheets
163
+ | |-- controllers
164
+ | |-- helpers
165
+ | |-- mailers
166
+ | |-- models
167
+ | `-- views
168
+ | `-- layouts
169
+ |-- config
170
+ | |-- environments
171
+ | |-- initializers
172
+ | `-- locales
173
+ |-- db
174
+ |-- doc
175
+ |-- lib
176
+ | `-- tasks
177
+ |-- log
178
+ |-- public
179
+ |-- script
180
+ |-- test
181
+ | |-- fixtures
182
+ | |-- functional
183
+ | |-- integration
184
+ | |-- performance
185
+ | `-- unit
186
+ |-- tmp
187
+ | |-- cache
188
+ | |-- pids
189
+ | |-- sessions
190
+ | `-- sockets
191
+ `-- vendor
192
+ |-- assets
193
+ `-- stylesheets
194
+ `-- plugins
195
+
196
+ app
197
+ Holds all the code that's specific to this particular application.
198
+
199
+ app/assets
200
+ Contains subdirectories for images, stylesheets, and JavaScript files.
201
+
202
+ app/controllers
203
+ Holds controllers that should be named like weblogs_controller.rb for
204
+ automated URL mapping. All controllers should descend from
205
+ ApplicationController which itself descends from ActionController::Base.
206
+
207
+ app/models
208
+ Holds models that should be named like post.rb. Models descend from
209
+ ActiveRecord::Base by default.
210
+
211
+ app/views
212
+ Holds the template files for the view that should be named like
213
+ weblogs/index.html.erb for the WeblogsController#index action. All views use
214
+ eRuby syntax by default.
215
+
216
+ app/views/layouts
217
+ Holds the template files for layouts to be used with views. This models the
218
+ common header/footer method of wrapping views. In your views, define a layout
219
+ using the <tt>layout :default</tt> and create a file named default.html.erb.
220
+ Inside default.html.erb, call <% yield %> to render the view using this
221
+ layout.
222
+
223
+ app/helpers
224
+ Holds view helpers that should be named like weblogs_helper.rb. These are
225
+ generated for you automatically when using generators for controllers.
226
+ Helpers can be used to wrap functionality for your views into methods.
227
+
228
+ config
229
+ Configuration files for the Rails environment, the routing map, the database,
230
+ and other dependencies.
231
+
232
+ db
233
+ Contains the database schema in schema.rb. db/migrate contains all the
234
+ sequence of Migrations for your schema.
235
+
236
+ doc
237
+ This directory is where your application documentation will be stored when
238
+ generated using <tt>rake doc:app</tt>
239
+
240
+ lib
241
+ Application specific libraries. Basically, any kind of custom code that
242
+ doesn't belong under controllers, models, or helpers. This directory is in
243
+ the load path.
244
+
245
+ public
246
+ The directory available for the web server. Also contains the dispatchers and the
247
+ default HTML files. This should be set as the DOCUMENT_ROOT of your web
248
+ server.
249
+
250
+ script
251
+ Helper scripts for automation and generation.
252
+
253
+ test
254
+ Unit and functional tests along with fixtures. When using the rails generate
255
+ command, template test files will be generated for you and placed in this
256
+ directory.
257
+
258
+ vendor
259
+ External libraries that the application depends on. Also includes the plugins
260
+ subdirectory. If the app has frozen rails, those gems also go here, under
261
+ vendor/rails/. This directory is in the load path.
data/spec/dummy/Rakefile CHANGED
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
1
- #!/usr/bin/env rake
2
- # Add your own tasks in files placed in lib/tasks ending in .rake,
3
- # for example lib/tasks/capistrano.rake, and they will automatically be available to Rake.
4
-
5
- require File.expand_path('../config/application', __FILE__)
6
-
7
- Dummy::Application.load_tasks
1
+ #!/usr/bin/env rake
2
+ # Add your own tasks in files placed in lib/tasks ending in .rake,
3
+ # for example lib/tasks/capistrano.rake, and they will automatically be available to Rake.
4
+
5
+ require File.expand_path('../config/application', __FILE__)
6
+
7
+ Dummy::Application.load_tasks
@@ -1,15 +1,15 @@
1
- // This is a manifest file that'll be compiled into application.js, which will include all the files
2
- // listed below.
3
- //
4
- // Any JavaScript/Coffee file within this directory, lib/assets/javascripts, vendor/assets/javascripts,
5
- // or vendor/assets/javascripts of plugins, if any, can be referenced here using a relative path.
6
- //
7
- // It's not advisable to add code directly here, but if you do, it'll appear at the bottom of the
8
- // the compiled file.
9
- //
10
- // WARNING: THE FIRST BLANK LINE MARKS THE END OF WHAT'S TO BE PROCESSED, ANY BLANK LINE SHOULD
11
- // GO AFTER THE REQUIRES BELOW.
12
- //
13
- //= require jquery
14
- //= require jquery_ujs
15
- //= require_tree .
1
+ // This is a manifest file that'll be compiled into application.js, which will include all the files
2
+ // listed below.
3
+ //
4
+ // Any JavaScript/Coffee file within this directory, lib/assets/javascripts, vendor/assets/javascripts,
5
+ // or vendor/assets/javascripts of plugins, if any, can be referenced here using a relative path.
6
+ //
7
+ // It's not advisable to add code directly here, but if you do, it'll appear at the bottom of the
8
+ // the compiled file.
9
+ //
10
+ // WARNING: THE FIRST BLANK LINE MARKS THE END OF WHAT'S TO BE PROCESSED, ANY BLANK LINE SHOULD
11
+ // GO AFTER THE REQUIRES BELOW.
12
+ //
13
+ //= require jquery
14
+ //= require jquery_ujs
15
+ //= require_tree .
@@ -1,13 +1,13 @@
1
- /*
2
- * This is a manifest file that'll be compiled into application.css, which will include all the files
3
- * listed below.
4
- *
5
- * Any CSS and SCSS file within this directory, lib/assets/stylesheets, vendor/assets/stylesheets,
6
- * or vendor/assets/stylesheets of plugins, if any, can be referenced here using a relative path.
7
- *
8
- * You're free to add application-wide styles to this file and they'll appear at the top of the
9
- * compiled file, but it's generally better to create a new file per style scope.
10
- *
11
- *= require_self
12
- *= require_tree .
13
- */
1
+ /*
2
+ * This is a manifest file that'll be compiled into application.css, which will include all the files
3
+ * listed below.
4
+ *
5
+ * Any CSS and SCSS file within this directory, lib/assets/stylesheets, vendor/assets/stylesheets,
6
+ * or vendor/assets/stylesheets of plugins, if any, can be referenced here using a relative path.
7
+ *
8
+ * You're free to add application-wide styles to this file and they'll appear at the top of the
9
+ * compiled file, but it's generally better to create a new file per style scope.
10
+ *
11
+ *= require_self
12
+ *= require_tree .
13
+ */
@@ -1,3 +1,3 @@
1
- class ApplicationController < ActionController::Base
2
- protect_from_forgery
3
- end
1
+ class ApplicationController < ActionController::Base
2
+ protect_from_forgery
3
+ end
@@ -1,2 +1,2 @@
1
- module ApplicationHelper
2
- end
1
+ module ApplicationHelper
2
+ end
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
1
- class CustomTestObject
2
- attr_accessor :test_value
3
-
4
- def initialize(val)
5
- @test_value = val
6
- end
1
+ class CustomTestObject
2
+ attr_accessor :test_value
3
+
4
+ def initialize(val)
5
+ @test_value = val
6
+ end
7
7
  end
@@ -1,4 +1,3 @@
1
- class Product < ActiveRecord::Base
2
- attr_accessible :name
3
- eav_hash_for :tech_specs
4
- end
1
+ class Product < ActiveRecord::Base
2
+ eav_hash_for :tech_specs
3
+ end