Sha256: 4116526d3f73802ad0552de4941103846925ca443e69f648244b7ba3bca86d9e

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Size: 1.73 KB

Versions: 1

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Stored size: 1.73 KB

Contents

# Generated by jeweler
# DO NOT EDIT THIS FILE DIRECTLY
# Instead, edit Jeweler::Tasks in Rakefile, and run 'rake gemspec'
# -*- encoding: utf-8 -*-

Gem::Specification.new do |s|
  s.name = %q{enumerate_it}
  s.version = "0.7.2"

  s.required_rubygems_version = Gem::Requirement.new(">= 0") if s.respond_to? :required_rubygems_version=
  s.authors = ["C\303\241ssio Marques"]
  s.date = %q{2011-01-24}
  s.description = %q{Have a legacy database and need some enumerations in your models to match those stupid '4 rows/2 columns' tables with foreign keys and stop doing joins just to fetch a simple description? Or maybe use some integers instead of strings as the code for each value of your enumerations? Here's EnumerateIt.}
  s.email = %q{cassiommc@gmail.com}
  s.extra_rdoc_files = [
    "LICENSE",
    "README.rdoc"
  ]
  s.files = [
    ".document",
    "LICENSE",
    "README.rdoc",
    "Rakefile",
    "VERSION",
    "enumerate_it.gemspec",
    "lib/enumerate_it.rb",
    "spec/enumerate_it_spec.rb",
    "spec/i18n/en.yml",
    "spec/i18n/pt.yml",
    "spec/spec.opts",
    "spec/spec_helper.rb"
  ]
  s.homepage = %q{http://github.com/cassiomarques/enumerate_it}
  s.require_paths = ["lib"]
  s.rubygems_version = %q{1.3.7}
  s.summary = %q{Ruby Enumerations}
  s.test_files = [
    "spec/enumerate_it_spec.rb",
    "spec/spec_helper.rb"
  ]

  if s.respond_to? :specification_version then
    current_version = Gem::Specification::CURRENT_SPECIFICATION_VERSION
    s.specification_version = 3

    if Gem::Version.new(Gem::VERSION) >= Gem::Version.new('1.2.0') then
      s.add_development_dependency(%q<rspec>, [">= 1.2.9"])
    else
      s.add_dependency(%q<rspec>, [">= 1.2.9"])
    end
  else
    s.add_dependency(%q<rspec>, [">= 1.2.9"])
  end
end

Version data entries

1 entries across 1 versions & 1 rubygems

Version Path
enumerate_it-0.7.2 enumerate_it.gemspec