From: MrZombie on 27 Jul 2010 11:59 Is there anyway to make it so that --color be a default option? Like a global ~/.rspecrc file? -- Thank you for your brain. -MrZombie
From: Benoit Daloze on 27 Jul 2010 12:49 ~/.rspec mine is: --color --format documentation On 27/07/2010, MrZombie <mrzombie(a)thezombie.net> wrote: > Is there anyway to make it so that --color be a default option? Like a > global ~/.rspecrc file? > -- > Thank you for your brain. > -MrZombie > > >
From: MrZombie on 27 Jul 2010 13:19 That will sound stupid, but it doesn't work for me. Any other magic step I should take? On 2010-07-27 12:49:12 -0400, Benoit Daloze said: > ~/.rspec > > mine is: > --color > --format documentation > > On 27/07/2010, MrZombie <mrzombie(a)thezombie.net> wrote: >> Is there anyway to make it so that --color be a default option? Like a >> global ~/.rspecrc file? >> -- >> Thank you for your brain. >> -MrZombie -- Thank you for your brain. -MrZombie
From: MrZombie on 27 Jul 2010 13:26 Meh. I ended up aliasing the command in my bash profile. Thanks anyway :P On 2010-07-27 13:19:13 -0400, MrZombie said: > That will sound stupid, but it doesn't work for me. Any other magic > step I should take? > > On 2010-07-27 12:49:12 -0400, Benoit Daloze said: > >> ~/.rspec >> >> mine is: >> --color >> --format documentation >> >> On 27/07/2010, MrZombie <mrzombie(a)thezombie.net> wrote: >>> Is there anyway to make it so that --color be a default option? Like a >>> global ~/.rspecrc file? >>> -- >>> Thank you for your brain. >>> -MrZombie -- Thank you for your brain. -MrZombie
|
Pages: 1 Prev: Dolphin Dale high School: N Naveen Chowdary Next: Where can I find the 'shebang' line? |