ohm 0.1.2 → 0.1.3

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Files changed (3) hide show
  1. data/README.markdown +22 -12
  2. data/lib/ohm/version.rb +1 -1
  3. metadata +10 -26
@@ -17,6 +17,16 @@ Join the mailing list: [http://groups.google.com/group/ohm-ruby](http://groups.g
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  Meet us on IRC: [#ohm](irc://chat.freenode.net/#ohm) on [freenode.net](http://freenode.net/)
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+ Related projects
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+ ----------------
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+
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+ These are libraries in other languages that were inspired by Ohm.
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+ * [JOhm](https://github.com/xetorthio/johm) for Java, created by xetorthio
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+ * [Nohm](https://github.com/maritz/nohm) for Node.js, created by maritz
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+ * [Redisco](https://github.com/iamteem/redisco) for Python, created by iamteem
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+
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  Getting started
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  ---------------
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@@ -44,7 +54,7 @@ Now, in an irb session you can test the Redis adapter directly:
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  >> Ohm.redis.get "Foo"
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  => "Bar"
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- ## Connecting to the Redis database {: #connecting }
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+ ## Connecting to the Redis database
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  There are a couple of different strategies for connecting to your Redis
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  database. The first is to explicitly set the `:host`, `:port`, `:db` and
@@ -231,7 +241,7 @@ You can add instances of `Person` to the set of attendees with the
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  # ...do what you want with this person.
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  end
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- ## Sorting {: #sorting}
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+ ## Sorting
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  Since `attendees` is a {Ohm::Model::Set Set}, it exposes two sorting
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  methods: {Ohm::Model::Collection#sort sort} returns the elements
@@ -323,7 +333,7 @@ After this, every time you refer to `post.comments` you will be talking
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  about instances of the model `Comment`. If you want to get a list of IDs
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  you can use `post.comments.key.smembers`.
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- ### References explained {: #references }
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+ ### References explained
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  Doing a {Ohm::Model.reference reference} is actually just a shortcut for
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  the following:
@@ -352,7 +362,7 @@ and also search comments using the `post_id` index.
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  Comment.find(:post_id => 1)
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- ### Collections explained {: #collections }
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+ ### Collections explained
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  The reason a {Ohm::Model.reference reference} and a
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  {Ohm::Model.collection collection} go hand in hand, is that a collection is
@@ -545,14 +555,14 @@ Tutorials
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  Check the examples to get a feeling of the design patterns for Redis.
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- 1. [Activity Feed](examples/activity-feed.html)
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- 2. [Chaining finds](examples/chaining.html)
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- 3. [Serialization to JSON](examples/json-hash.html)
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- 4. [One to many associations](examples/one-to-many.html)
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- 5. [Philosophy behind Ohm](examples/philosophy.html)
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- 6. [Learning Ohm internals](examples/redis-logging.html)
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- 7. [Slugs and permalinks](examples/slug.html)
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- 8. [Tagging](examples/tagging.html)
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+ 1. [Activity Feed](http://ohm.keyvalue.org/examples/activity-feed.html)
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+ 2. [Chaining finds](http://ohm.keyvalue.org/examples/chaining.html)
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+ 3. [Serialization to JSON](http://ohm.keyvalue.org/examples/json-hash.html)
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+ 4. [One to many associations](http://ohm.keyvalue.org/examples/one-to-many.html)
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+ 5. [Philosophy behind Ohm](http://ohm.keyvalue.org/examples/philosophy.html)
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+ 6. [Learning Ohm internals](http://ohm.keyvalue.org/examples/redis-logging.html)
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+ 7. [Slugs and permalinks](http://ohm.keyvalue.org/examples/slug.html)
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+ 8. [Tagging](http://ohm.keyvalue.org/examples/tagging.html)
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  Versions
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  ========
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
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  # encoding: UTF-8
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  module Ohm
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- VERSION = "0.1.2"
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+ VERSION = "0.1.3"
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  end
metadata CHANGED
@@ -5,8 +5,8 @@ version: !ruby/object:Gem::Version
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  segments:
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  - 0
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  - 1
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- - 2
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- version: 0.1.2
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+ - 3
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+ version: 0.1.3
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  platform: ruby
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  authors:
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  - Michel Martens
@@ -15,28 +15,13 @@ autorequire:
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  bindir: bin
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  cert_chain: []
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- date: 2010-10-29 00:00:00 -03:00
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+ date: 2010-11-05 00:00:00 -03:00
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  default_executable:
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  dependencies:
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- - !ruby/object:Gem::Dependency
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- name: redis
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- prerelease: false
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- requirement: &id001 !ruby/object:Gem::Requirement
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- none: false
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- requirements:
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- - - ~>
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- - !ruby/object:Gem::Version
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- segments:
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- - 2
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- - 0
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- - 0
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- version: 2.0.0
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- type: :runtime
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- version_requirements: *id001
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  - !ruby/object:Gem::Dependency
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  name: nest
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  prerelease: false
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- requirement: &id002 !ruby/object:Gem::Requirement
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+ requirement: &id001 !ruby/object:Gem::Requirement
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  none: false
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  requirements:
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  - - ~>
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  segments:
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  - 1
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  - 0
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- - 0
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- version: 1.0.0
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+ version: "1.0"
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  type: :runtime
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- version_requirements: *id002
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+ version_requirements: *id001
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  - !ruby/object:Gem::Dependency
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  name: cutest
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  prerelease: false
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- requirement: &id003 !ruby/object:Gem::Requirement
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+ requirement: &id002 !ruby/object:Gem::Requirement
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  none: false
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  requirements:
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  - - ~>
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  - 1
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  version: "0.1"
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  type: :development
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- version_requirements: *id003
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+ version_requirements: *id002
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  - !ruby/object:Gem::Dependency
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  name: batch
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  prerelease: false
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- requirement: &id004 !ruby/object:Gem::Requirement
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+ requirement: &id003 !ruby/object:Gem::Requirement
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  none: false
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  requirements:
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  - - ~>
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  - 1
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  version: 0.0.1
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  type: :development
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- version_requirements: *id004
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+ version_requirements: *id003
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  description: Ohm is a library that allows to store an object in Redis, a persistent key-value database. It includes an extensible list of validations and has very good performance.
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  email:
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  - michel@soveran.com