If it's sunny (please) we'll sit outside and drink cool G&T's with
slices of cucumber or something :)
Sounds interesting. Can you elaborate a bit more about how you think it
would work?
As an alternative suggestion, we could potentially do something along
the lines of picking a Ruby Quiz (http://rubyquiz.com/) and all having a
go at implementing a solution (perhaps in pairs) and then discussing the
different implementations. This might be a bit more interactive?
Anyone else have an opinion?
Jon
PS. Anyone going to geek night tomorrow? Planning to have food at 6.30
at the Victoria if anyone wants to join.
cheers,
Arek Turlewicz
Matt, can you fill us in on the details of where we need to go? Will
there be internet available?
Cheers,
Jon
Jon
I can't be bothered to update the website at this stage as no-one looks
on there ;) have tweeted though. RT if you like :)
Jon
What seemed to work was having a piece of code that someone (i.e. me)
could talk to the group about, and the discussion just came out of that
really. So it turned into more of a code discussion than an actual
coding session I guess.
What do people want to do next month? It seems like we should do this
sort of thing again, but should we do it alternately with pub sessions?
And does anyone want to volunteer to talk about some bit of code that
they've written?
Another idea is that we could all work on some sort of challenege (e.g.
http://codebrawl.com/ or http://rubyquiz.com/) *before* the meeting and
then discuss our solutions at the actual meeting. But that requires a
bit more commitment from attendees so I dunno.
Thoughts welcome!
Jon
I'd be happy to talk about PaperTrail, my gem for versioning ActiveRecord models. Depending on what people would be interested in, I could explain how it works, why it's built the way it is, etc. And you could also all help me figure out the piece of the puzzle I'm stuck on :)
Either pub or lab would work for me!
Cheers,
Andy
-------
http://airbladesoftware.com