> I am reading "The Rails Way". On page 20, Obie says use
> $ tail -f log/development_log
Get...
- http://www.cygwin.com/setup.exe
- a tutorial on either Linux or BASH
The Linux tutorial will cover BASH.
Tip: After you learn a little BASH, you will not go back to CMD.EXE. Most of the
keystrokes and commands are much easier to use, and more flexible.
Also, _don't_ install CygWin's version of Ruby, because if you current Ruby is
configured well enough to run Rails, you don't need to ... derail that. But you
might find yourself running cmd /c rake instead of just rake, for example.
And major props, honestly, to any book author who sincerely forgets there are
Windows users out there...
> I do have a Ubuntu box and I can do some rudimentary chugging about,
> but I bought a new lenovo and feel compelled to use it after dropping
> that much coin. I tried to install Ubuntu on the Lenovo and it died.
> Fiesty fawn I believe. Any thoughts on what might run?
>> -http://www.cygwin.com/setup.exe
cygwin is the core set of Linux toys, using Windows as its Hardware Abstraction
Layer.
Phlip,
Thanks for the props. I thought you might like this snippet from the
introduction to the book:
Required Technology
A late-model Apple MacBookPro with 4GB RAM, running OSX 10.4. Just kidding, of
course. Linux is pretty good for Rails development also. Microsoft
Windows — well, let me
just put it this way — your mileage may vary. I'm being nice and
diplomatic in saying that. We
specifically do not discuss Rails development on Microsoft platforms
in this book. To my
knowledge, most working Rails professionals develop and deploy on
non-Microsoft platforms.
Cheers,
Obie
-----Original Message-----
From: rubyonra...@googlegroups.com
[mailto:rubyonra...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Obie Fernandez
Sent: Thursday, May 22, 2008 8:08 AM
To: rubyonra...@googlegroups.com
Subject: [Rails] Re: How to use "tail"? .. no, the other kind!
> And major props, honestly, to any book author who sincerely forgets
> there are Windows users out there...
Phlip,
Thanks for the props. I thought you might like this snippet from the
introduction to the book:
Required Technology
A late-model Apple MacBookPro with 4GB RAM, running OSX 10.4. Just
kidding, of course. Linux is pretty good for Rails development also.
Microsoft Windows - well, let me just put it this way - your mileage may