[2708] MacRubyWebsite/trunk/content/documentation/tutorial.txt
Revision: 2708 http://trac.macosforge.org/projects/ruby/changeset/2708 Author: mattaimonetti@gmail.com Date: 2009-10-01 23:51:44 -0700 (Thu, 01 Oct 2009) Log Message: ----------- display fix, take 2 Modified Paths: -------------- MacRubyWebsite/trunk/content/documentation/tutorial.txt Modified: MacRubyWebsite/trunk/content/documentation/tutorial.txt =================================================================== --- MacRubyWebsite/trunk/content/documentation/tutorial.txt 2009-10-02 06:38:58 UTC (rev 2707) +++ MacRubyWebsite/trunk/content/documentation/tutorial.txt 2009-10-02 06:51:44 UTC (rev 2708) @@ -47,7 +47,6 @@ It is very easy to use an Objective-C class from MacRuby. You just have to refer to it as if it was a Ruby class. For example, to access the NSSound class: -<code> <pre class="commands"> $ /usr/local/bin/macirb --simple-prompt
framework 'Cocoa' @@ -55,7 +54,6 @@ NSSound.ancestors => [NSSound, Object, NSObject, Kernel] </pre> -</code>
In MacRuby, all classes, including Ruby core classes, always inherit from NSObject, the root class of most Objective-C classes. @@ -178,7 +176,7 @@ NSBorderlessWindowMask, NSBackingStoreBuffered, false) -<% end -%> +<% end -%> To call setter methods on Objective-C objects, you normally call a method like setName, using the name as the argument. MacRuby provides a facility which allows the use of standard attribute writer methods:
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