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Nugem Gem Version

Nugem creates a scaffold project for a new gem in a new git repository. After you add your special code to the gem scaffold, the project is ready to be released to a public or private gem server.

This gem generates a new working Visual Studio Code project with the following features:

  • Compatible with rbenv.
  • Gemfile and .gemspec files set up.
  • Generates a README with badges.
  • Visual Studio Code project is set up with current Ruby extensions.
    • Rubocop configured.
    • Shellcheck configured.
    • Markdown lint configured.
    • Launch configurations set up for testing.
  • Can automatically create a public or private git repository on GitHub for your new gem.
  • Creates a test infrastructure based on rspec.
  • Your gem can be publicly released to rubygems.org.
  • Optionally create the gem as:
    • A plain old gem.
    • A Jekyll plugin (tag or block tag).

The following features are still in development, so they probably do not work yet:

  • Automatically creates git repositories on BitBucket or Geminabox.
  • Creates a test infrastructure based on minitest and minitest-reporters.
  • Your gem can be privately released to a Geminabox gem server.
  • Your gem can include a Thor-based executable.
  • Optionally create the gem as:
    • A Jekyll plugin (filter, generator, or hooks).
    • A Rails plugin, possibly with a mountable engine.

Installation

$ gem install nugem

If you are using rbenv to manage Ruby instances, type:

$ rbenv rehash

To update the program:

$ gem update nugem

Subcommands and Options

Nugem has 4 subcommands plain, jekyll, help and rails. Currently, only plain, jekyll and help have been properly tested.

help Subcommand

The following lists the available subcommands:

$ nugem help

The following provides detailed help for the specified subcommand:

$ nugem help [SUBCOMMAND]

Common Options

The plain, jekyll and rails subcommands have common options.

The default option values assume that:

  • You do not want an executable for your gem scaffold
  • The gem project will be hosted on a public GitHub git repository
  • The gem will be released to rubygems.org

Common options for the plain, jekyll and rails subcommands are:

--executable
add an executable based on Thor.
--host
specifies the git host; possible values are bitbucket, github and geminabox.
--out_dir
specifies the directory to write the generated gem to. The default is generated/.
--private
the remote repository is made private, and on release the gem will be pushed to a private Geminabox server.
--quiet
reduces verbosity.
--no-todos
do not generate `TODO:` strings in generated code.

Common Behavior

The plain, jekyll and rails subcommands have common behavior.

Gem scaffolds are created within the generated/ directory of the current directory.

If your user name is not already stored in your git global config, you will be asked for your GitHub or BitBucket user name. You will also be asked to enter your GitHub or BitBucket password when the remote repository is created for you.

After you create the gem, edit the gemspec and change the summary and the description. Then commit the changes to git and invoke rake release, and your gem will be published.

plain Subcommand

$ nugem plain NAME [COMMON_OPTIONS] [--test-framework=minitest|rspec]

NAME is the name of the gem to be generated.

The default test framework for the plain subcommand is rspec, but you can specify minitest instead like this:

$ nugem plain my_gem --test-framework=minitest

jekyll Subcommand

The jekyll subcommand extends the plain subcommand and creates a new Jekyll plugin with the given NAME:

$ nugem jekyll NAME [OPTIONS]

NAME is the name of the Jekyll plugin gem to be generated.

In addition to the common options, the jekyll-specific OPTIONS are:

--block, --blockn, --filter, --hooks, --tag, and --tagn.

(Warning: only --block and --tag been properly tested.)

Each of these options causes nugem to prompt the user for additional input.

The test framework for jekyll plugins is rspec.

All of the above options can be specified more than once, except the --hooks option. For example:

$ nugem jekyll test_tags --tag my_tag1 --tag my_tag2

The above creates a Jekyll plugin called test_tags, which defines Jekyll tags called my_tag1 and my_tag2. You might use these tags in an HTML document like this:

<pre>
my_tag1 usage: {% my_tag1 %}
my_tag2 usage: {% my_tag2 %}
</pre>

For more information, type:

$ nugem help jekyll

rails Subcommand

The rails subcommand extends the plain subcommand and creates a new Rails plugin with the given NAME:

$ nugem rails NAME [OPTIONS]

NAME is the name of the Ruby on Rails plugin gem to be generated.

In addition to the common options, rails OPTIONS are --engine and --mountable.

You can specify if the plugin should be an engine (--engine) or a mountable engine (--mountable).

Each of these options causes nugem to prompt the user for additional input.

The test framework for rails gems is minitest.

For more information, type:

$ nugem help rails

Did It Work?

The following shows all files that were committed to the newly created git repository, after nugem jekyll finished making two tag blocks:

$ git ls-tree --name-only --full-tree -r HEAD
.envrc
.gitignore
.rspec
.rubocop.yml
.simplecov
.travis.yml
.vscode/extensions.json
.vscode/launch.json
.vscode/settings.json
CHANGELOG.md
Gemfile
LICENCE.txt
README.md
Rakefile
bin/attach
bin/console
bin/rake
bin/setup
demo/Gemfile
demo/_bin/debug
demo/_config.yml
demo/_drafts/2022/2022-05-01-test2.html
demo/_includes/block_tag_template_wrapper
demo/_layouts/default.html
demo/_posts/2022/2022-01-02-redact-test.html
demo/assets/css/style.css
demo/assets/images/404-error.png
demo/assets/images/404-error.webp
demo/assets/images/favicon.png
demo/assets/images/jekyll.png
demo/assets/images/jekyll.webp
demo/assets/js/clipboard.min.js
demo/assets/js/jquery-3.4.1.min.js
demo/blog/blogsByDate.html
demo/blog/index.html
demo/index.html
jekyll_test.code-workspace
jekyll_test.gemspec
lib/jekyll_test.rb
lib/jekyll_test/version.rb
lib/my_block1.rb
lib/my_block2.rb
spec/jekyll_test_spec.rb
spec/spec_helper.rb
test/jekyll_test_test.rb
test/test_helper.rb

Visual Studio Code Support

Nugem Project

Plugins

If you have not installed the Snippets extension, Visual Studio Code will suggest that you do so the first time you open this project with Visual Studio Code. You can also review the list of suggested extensions of with the Ctrl-P Extensions: Show Recommended Extensions command.

Snippets

The predefined snippets for nugem are defined in .vscode/nugem.json.code-snippets. These snippets are focused on maintaining nugem itself.

File Associations

.vscode/settings.json defines file associations for various flavors of Thor templates in the "files.associations" section. You can disable them by commenting some or all of those definitions.

Generated Projects

Plugins

Similarly, for each gem project generated by nugem, Visual Studio Code will suggest the user install missing extensions the first time those projects are opened.

Snippets

The predefined snippets for gem projects generated by nugem are defined in their .vscode/gem.json.code-snippets file. These snippets are focused on writing Jekyll plugins.

Development

After checking out the repository, run bin/setup to install dependencies. Then, run rake test to run the tests. You can also run bin/console for an interactive prompt that will allow you to experiment.

To install this gem onto your local machine, run:

$ bundle exec rake install

To release a new version, run:

$ bundle exec rake release

The above will create a git tag for the version, push git commits and tags, and push the .gem file to https://rubygems.org.

Contributing

Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/mslinn/nugem.

See Also

Languages

  • Ruby 75.3%
  • HTML 13.4%
  • Shell 5.3%
  • CSS 4.1%
  • JavaScript 1.9%