RailsWizard Gem
The RailsWizard gem is both the official repository of recipes for RailsWizard as well as a stand-alone tool to generate rails templates from the command line. The website and the gem are kept in version sync, so any recipes released to the gem will be simultaneously available on the web builder.
Installation
Installation is simple:
gem install rails_wizard
Usage
The primary usage of the rails_wizard
gem is to utilize its
interactive terminal command to build a Rails template. To get started,
you can simply run the command thusly:
rails_wizard new APP_NAME
Where APP_NAME
is the directory in which you wish to create the app
(it mirrors the Rails creation syntax). You will then be guided through
the recipe selection process and subsequently the Rails app generator
will automatically run with the template and all appropriate command
line options included.
Specifying Recipes
If you wish to skip the interactive recipe selector, you may provide
instead a list of recipes with the -r
option:
rails_wizard new APP_NAME -r jquery mongo_mapper sass
This will automatically generate a Rails template with the provided recipes and begin the app generator.
Listing Recipes
You can also print out a simple list of recipes:
rails_wizard list
Or print out a list of recipes for a specific category:
rails_wizard list persistence
RailsWizard Recipes
Previously stored in MongoDB, the RailsWizard recipe collection now live in this GitHub repository to make them fork-friendly and available for use with the command-line tool. You can see all of the recipes in the recipes directory.
If you're looking for the web app source code, it now lives at rails_wizard.web.
Submitting a Recipe
Submitting a recipe is actually a very straightforward process. Recipes
are made of up template code and YAML back-matter stored in a
ruby file. The __END__
parsing convention is used so that each recipe
is actually a valid, parseable Ruby file. The structure of a recipe
looks something like this:
gem 'supergem'
after_bundler do
generate "supergem:install"
end
__END__
It's really that simple. The gem has RSpec tests that automatically
validate each recipe in the repository, so you should run rake spec
as a basic sanity check before submitting a pull request. Note that
these don't verify that your recipe code itself works, just that
RailsWizard could properly parse and understand your recipe file.
For more information on all available options for authoring recipes, please see the
License
RailsWizard and its recipes are distributed under the MIT License.