This came about thanks to Mark on the Renoise forum. Thanks for finally pointing me in the right direction for this.
http://forum.renoise.com/index.php?/topic/38738-renoise-linux-and-pulseaudio/
| nl: | |
| devise: | |
| failure: | |
| invited: "U bent reeds uitgenodigd, accepteer de uitnodiging die u heeft ontvangen per mail om uw account te accepteren." | |
| invitations: | |
| send_instructions: "Een uitnodigingsmail aan %{email} is verstuurd." | |
| invitation_token_invalid: "De uitnodigingscode is ongeldig!" | |
| updated: "Uw wachtwoord is ingesteld. U bent nu ingelogd." | |
| updated_not_active: "Uw wachtwoord is ingesteld." | |
| no_invitations_remaining: "Geen uitnodigingen over." |
This came about thanks to Mark on the Renoise forum. Thanks for finally pointing me in the right direction for this.
http://forum.renoise.com/index.php?/topic/38738-renoise-linux-and-pulseaudio/
I've used Cucumber quite a bit on my last job. It's an excellent tool, and I believe readable tests are the way to the future. But I could never get around to write effective scenarios, or maintain the boatload of text that the suite becomes once you get to a point where you have decent coverage. On top of that, it didn't seem to take much for the suite to become really slow as tests were added.
A while ago I've seen a gist by Lachie Cox where he shows how to use RSpec and Capybara to do front-end tests. That sounded perfect for me. I love RSpec, I can write my own matchers when I need them with little code, and it reads damn nicely.
So for my Rails Rumble 2010 project, as usual, I rolled a Sinatra app and figured I should give the idea a shot. Below are my findings.