public
Description: Ruby on Rails
Homepage: http://rubyonrails.org
Clone URL: git://github.com/rails/rails.git
lawrencepit (author)
Sun Jul 05 18:42:41 -0700 2009
wycats (committer)
Tue Jul 07 18:36:42 -0700 2009
commit  579250ea467ac406a5897dc2187c7959bf343b4f
tree    94f94fdda84916d9bc806d1e8cadae67dee9273c
parent  da635394c1c3004f4dacf4a35275404e5b1aef43
rails / activesupport
name age message
..
file CHANGELOG Mon Jun 08 13:21:30 -0700 2009 JSON: split encoding and coercion [jeremy]
file MIT-LICENSE Sat Jan 17 21:28:21 -0800 2009 Bump up the year in MIT license files [lifo]
file README Mon Nov 07 01:51:47 -0800 2005 Fix READMEs (closes #2680) [coffee2code] git-s... [dhh]
file Rakefile Sun Jun 07 20:09:21 -0700 2009 Add notes to TZInfo bundling task [gbuesing]
directory bin/ Sun Sep 21 08:21:30 -0700 2008 Simplify ActiveSupport::Multibyte and make it r... [Manfred]
file install.rb Fri Sep 28 07:18:47 -0700 2007 Fixed spelling errors (closes #9706) [tarmo/rmm... [dhh]
directory lib/ Loading commit data...
directory test/
activesupport/README
= Active Support -- Utility classes and standard library extensions from Rails

Active Support is a collection of various utility classes and standard library extensions that were found useful
for Rails. All these additions have hence been collected in this bundle as way to gather all that sugar that makes
Ruby sweeter.


== Download

The latest version of Active Support can be found at

* http://rubyforge.org/project/showfiles.php?group_id=182

Documentation can be found at 

* http://as.rubyonrails.com


== Installation

The preferred method of installing Active Support is through its GEM file. You'll need to have
RubyGems[http://rubygems.rubyforge.org/wiki/wiki.pl] installed for that, though. If you have it,
then use:

  % [sudo] gem install activesupport-1.0.0.gem


== License

Active Support is released under the MIT license.


== Support

The Active Support homepage is http://www.rubyonrails.com. You can find the Active Support
RubyForge page at http://rubyforge.org/projects/activesupport. And as Jim from Rake says:

   Feel free to submit commits or feature requests.  If you send a patch,
   remember to update the corresponding unit tests.  If fact, I prefer
   new feature to be submitted in the form of new unit tests.

For other information, feel free to ask on the ruby-talk mailing list
(which is mirrored to comp.lang.ruby) or contact mailto:david@loudthinking.com.