Sha256: 48d06c19256fa09e6350585d9a0f71fce7c5b9fad4e9f438b7ea3c18a25958b5
Contents?: true
Size: 1.76 KB
Versions: 1
Compression:
Stored size: 1.76 KB
Contents
# Generated by jeweler # DO NOT EDIT THIS FILE DIRECTLY # Instead, edit Jeweler::Tasks in Rakefile, and run the gemspec command # -*- encoding: utf-8 -*- Gem::Specification.new do |s| s.name = %q{enumerate_it} s.version = "0.4.0" s.required_rubygems_version = Gem::Requirement.new(">= 0") if s.respond_to? :required_rubygems_version= s.authors = ["C\303\241ssio Marques"] s.date = %q{2010-04-10} 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", ".gitignore", "LICENSE", "README.rdoc", "Rakefile", "VERSION", "enumerate_it.gemspec", "lib/enumerate_it.rb", "spec/enumerate_it_spec.rb", "spec/spec.opts", "spec/spec_helper.rb" ] s.homepage = %q{http://github.com/cassiomarques/enumerate_it} s.rdoc_options = ["--charset=UTF-8"] s.require_paths = ["lib"] s.rubygems_version = %q{1.3.6} 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::RubyGemsVersion) >= 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-0.4.0 | enumerate_it.gemspec |