Hi Ben, That sounds like a good idea and looks like what I had in mind. I was thinking of having a status page, that shows hitlist items (critical bugs / things to do for the upcoming release), some rubyspec progress, a link to the latest nighty build, etc. The hitlist thing could be generated from a local file from the repository. We currently use TODO for that. We wrote a special mspec formatter in order to know what percentage of a given spec category we do pass. But having a more detailed view (classes / methods as you suggested) might be more interesting, this way we know on what class / method to focus in priority. Assuming that the mspec formatter is altered a little bit, this information could also be generated after a spec:ci pass. Is that what you had in mind? I guess the challenge here is to write a program that generates a Webby page for our website, commit it to the repository every time a change is made, then we would re-deploy the site right after. Laurent On Oct 1, 2009, at 11:01 PM, Ben Schwarz wrote:
Hi all,
I've had some loose discussions with @lrz regarding a visual representation of classes and methods that are working via the rubyspec. This would enable developers to find an area of development to focus on and also for end-users to understand what they might face before conducting any development using macruby (bringing real applications closer to tuition, rather than a start/stop experience)
I'm happy to offer some hours to get something together that is styled like macruby.org but I obviously need to:
A) consult the group B) work out a spec C) have something setup on the macruby.org infrastructure.
Discuss.
Cheers,
-
Ben Schwarz Web architect
Web: http://www.germanforblack.com Mobile: +61 407 339 418
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