Debug a ruby project (to become familiar with the code flow) [closed] - ruby

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Can someone suggest a IDE for Ruby which will make it easier to understand the code flow of the project. I am looking for something similar to intellij remote debugger for JAVA. The debugger should transfer the complete control of the code, so that stepping into and stepping out of the code becomes easier.

Rubymine is a very good IDE by JetBrains, so you should be on famillier grounds if you've worked IntelliJ. Among other things, it has a built in debugger with the functionalities you described.
One major caveat though - it's not free, and there's no community edition like there is for IntelliJ.

I use cloud9 IDE for Ruby programming and it does everything and more. You get a full Linux environment which includes a terminal, file-tree structure navigation and a code-editor. Best of all it's free to use but there are upgrade options if you need more muscle.
You can even collaborate on it (which you may have to pay for, I'm not sure).

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SFCC (demandware) Debugging [closed]

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How I can debug Controllers or template in SFCC (Demandware) without Eclipse?
I know about atom debugger, but maybe you now something else, something more comfortable.
Please check VSC code editor and prophet debugger plugin. This is an alternative solution for SFCC development against to Eclipse IDE.
Also, you can check this post on xChange
As from now you can also use Jetbrains IDE with this plugin Salesforce B2C Commerce ​(SFCC)​ to debug your code(and even much more).
You can use Visual Studio Code with Package Prophet Debugger it is Free
Or use Jetbrains IDE with the plugin Salesforce B2C Commerce ​(SFCC)​ it is not free you must buy

How to generate documentation for Clojure code on Windows? [closed]

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I can't seem to find a way to generate documentation for Clojure code on Windows.
Marginalia seems to be broken on all platforms since 1.7 (see here:
https://github.com/gdeer81/marginalia/issues/158).
Codox has an issue
open on this topic (https://github.com/weavejester/codox/issues/110).
The Autodoc plugin for Lein 2 seems to be broken as well (not
enough reputation to post more than two links, but there's an issue
open on this over at GitHub).
Has anyone succeeded in running any of these three on Windows? Should I try something else?
Note:
I do not have a choice here, it must run on Windows.
As I'm building a case for clojure in the company, it must play well with leiningen, which is used to build and test our code.
Another option is autodoc - seems to still be active, but from the README it seems there are no promises it works on windows - still you could give it a try.
I think codox might still be your best bet. It's pretty popular and well maintained (there's only 4 open bugs right now and they're pretty newish - one of which is the one you referenced in your question). So maybe give it some time.
Finally, I know this is probably obvious and not ideal, but you could at least do one-off generations of documentation on a *nix system for the time being.

Any useful CASE tool for Mac OS X? [closed]

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I'm a MAC user (not a fan :D) .. and I'm working these days on my graduation project in B.sc degree of Computer Science, and specifically I'm in the design phase. I've looked for CASE tools that should help me on my work, but unfortunately it seems there are no powerful CASE tools available!
could anyone suggest a good tool for me ?
Thanks in advance.
I would look at cross platform tools based on Java, specifically, tools which are based on the Eclipse platform. Eclipse runs really well on OS X, in fact, I believe it works even better than it does on Windows. Not all Eclipse-based tools will run on Mac (for example, Rational will not), but most will.
Look at the Eclipse Marketplace for some popular tools for UML, modeling, etc.
While this is likely to be closed as off-topic, you should see the other closed discussion or Apple's Visio replacement threads.
Summary is:
OmniGraffle for general, commercial diagramming.
Eclipse based tools, as most UML is for writing the bulky Java code.
Web based tools such as GenMyModel and Gliffy.
Any from the long list on Wikipedia.
As always, the exact needs you have will dictate your tool.

Are there any VBScript libraries? [closed]

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Are there any open source free VBScript libraries? I am doing a lot of windows administration and always find myself writing error prone code. Any help here?
You really should move to powershell.
I haven't heard of a sysadmin working in vbscript in quite a long time.
update
There used to be several sites that hosted script libraries, like win32scripting, but they've been rapidly disappearing due to powershell.
You might go check out The Scripting Guy. They have a section just for VBScript in their forums that may be of help.
Even 5 years after the post above was written it is still short sighted and doesn't answer the question.
Admins need to work in whatever language is available and suitable -- some of us with LARGE (1000s) server or client estates still have quite a bit of Win2003, Win2000, and even a few NT4 servers.
I dislike VBScript somewhat but write using it, since it is the only language besides CMD.exe batch that is ubiquitously available on all Microsoft systems from NT4 on forward.
Even our Win2003 servers don't typically have PowerShell.
Libraries:
http://sourceforge.net/projects/vbslib/
http://www.microsoft.com/en-us/download/details.aspx?id=12028
https://code.google.com/p/vbslib/
http://www.robvanderwoude.com/vbstech.php
http://www.activexperts.com/admin/scripts/vbscript/

How to work with a Mac on a OpenSource project? [closed]

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I'm really interested in participating as a new developer in an OpenSource project.
My Problem now is - what is the best way to participate with a Mac on an OSS Project? (Without using a Virtual Machine or DualBoot.)
As there is no usual apt-get system, what is the best way of working on such an existing project? Would you use Xcode or Eclipse or something else completely?
The setup for all those steps (Building, linking libraries etc.) has always been the part that never worked properly for me. Is there a tutorial which explains how to set the stuff up properly with these IDEs?
Thank you!
Fink is a package system for Mac, it gives you most of what apt-get does on a Linux system.
Xcode is the best choice, I think, irrespective of project
I can give you a very simple recipe.
Pick a Java open source project.
Install Eclipse on MacOS.
Go to work.
No libraries, no linking, no fuss, no muss, no bother.
If you want to work in C or C++, the question is going to be whether you are the only person. For a project that has already been ported to mac, you just do what the others are doing. You run 'configure', and all is well, and you use and editor to edit and gdb to debug.

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