Perhaps a silly question, but I am wondering how others deal with creating gems using "bundle gem".
Say I have a product called "Fooble", and I want different classes that deal with this product built as separate gems.
For example a class called "Configuration" that provides methods dealing with configuring the "Fooble" product.
In my opinion it would make sense to have a gem that makes a "Fooble::Configuration" class available.
When I do a "bundle gem fooble-configuration" however it results in a module "Fooble" containing a module "Configuration".
Does it make sense that Configuration is generated as a module by default? What other options do I have that would lead to the desired scaffold?
Cheers,
Erik.