From: MrZombie on
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
~/.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
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
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