Rubygems | Latest Versions for opnhttps://bundler.rubygems.org/gems2023-09-30T13:30:06Zopn (1.0.59)https://bundler.rubygems.org/gems/opn/versions/1.0.592023-02-07T10:30:12ZRobert A. HeilerThis library is called opn. It will simply output the name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another namespace to report with. For an explanation, just look at the few examples under the test/ directory. Why did I write it? I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized as well, since that helps me on the commandline. The name "opn" stands for "output program name". Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn, and Opn has only one method called opn().
This library is called opn. It will simply output the
name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another
namespace to report with. For an explanation, just
look at the few examples under the test/ directory.
Why did I write it?
I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will
report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote
this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the
name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized
as well, since that helps me on the commandline.
The name "opn" stands for "output program name".
Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn,
and Opn has only one method called opn().
opn (1.0.58)https://bundler.rubygems.org/gems/opn/versions/1.0.582022-09-07T17:34:05ZRobert A. HeilerThis library is called opn. It will simply output the name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another namespace to report with. For an explanation, just look at the few examples under the test/ directory. Why did I write it? I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized as well, since that helps me on the commandline. The name "opn" stands for "output program name". Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn, and Opn has only one method called opn().
This library is called opn. It will simply output the
name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another
namespace to report with. For an explanation, just
look at the few examples under the test/ directory.
Why did I write it?
I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will
report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote
this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the
name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized
as well, since that helps me on the commandline.
The name "opn" stands for "output program name".
Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn,
and Opn has only one method called opn().
opn (1.0.57)https://bundler.rubygems.org/gems/opn/versions/1.0.572021-08-15T15:33:04ZRobert A. HeilerThis library is called opn. It will simply output the name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another namespace to report with. For an explanation, just look at the few examples under the test/ directory. Why did I write it? I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized as well, since that helps me on the commandline. The name "opn" stands for "output program name". Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn, and Opn has only one method called opn().
This library is called opn. It will simply output the
name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another
namespace to report with. For an explanation, just
look at the few examples under the test/ directory.
Why did I write it?
I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will
report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote
this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the
name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized
as well, since that helps me on the commandline.
The name "opn" stands for "output program name".
Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn,
and Opn has only one method called opn().
opn (1.0.56)https://bundler.rubygems.org/gems/opn/versions/1.0.562021-06-07T10:14:57ZRobert A. HeilerThis library is called opn. It will simply output the name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another namespace to report with. For an explanation, just look at the few examples under the test/ directory. Why did I write it? I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized as well, since that helps me on the commandline. The name "opn" stands for "output program name". Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn, and Opn has only one method called opn().
This library is called opn. It will simply output the
name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another
namespace to report with. For an explanation, just
look at the few examples under the test/ directory.
Why did I write it?
I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will
report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote
this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the
name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized
as well, since that helps me on the commandline.
The name "opn" stands for "output program name".
Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn,
and Opn has only one method called opn().
opn (1.0.55)https://bundler.rubygems.org/gems/opn/versions/1.0.552021-05-28T09:55:36ZRobert A. HeilerThis library is called opn. It will simply output the name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another namespace to report with. For an explanation, just look at the few examples under the test/ directory. Why did I write it? I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized as well, since that helps me on the commandline. The name "opn" stands for "output program name". Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn, and Opn has only one method called opn().
This library is called opn. It will simply output the
name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another
namespace to report with. For an explanation, just
look at the few examples under the test/ directory.
Why did I write it?
I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will
report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote
this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the
name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized
as well, since that helps me on the commandline.
The name "opn" stands for "output program name".
Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn,
and Opn has only one method called opn().
opn (1.0.54)https://bundler.rubygems.org/gems/opn/versions/1.0.542021-05-15T01:03:53ZRobert A. HeilerThis library is called opn. It will simply output the name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another namespace to report with. For an explanation, just look at the few examples under the test/ directory. Why did I write it? I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized as well, since that helps me on the commandline. The name "opn" stands for "output program name". Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn, and Opn has only one method called opn().
This library is called opn. It will simply output the
name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another
namespace to report with. For an explanation, just
look at the few examples under the test/ directory.
Why did I write it?
I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will
report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote
this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the
name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized
as well, since that helps me on the commandline.
The name "opn" stands for "output program name".
Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn,
and Opn has only one method called opn().
opn (1.0.53)https://bundler.rubygems.org/gems/opn/versions/1.0.532020-01-20T19:20:33ZRobert A. HeilerThis library is called opn. It will simply output the name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another namespace to report with. For an explanation, just look at the few examples under the test/ directory. Why did I write it? I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized as well, since that helps me on the commandline. The name "opn" stands for "output program name". Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn, and Opn has only one method called opn(). If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more useful for others, please drop me an email at: shevegen@gmail.com Thank you.
This library is called opn. It will simply output the
name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another
namespace to report with. For an explanation, just
look at the few examples under the test/ directory.
Why did I write it?
I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will
report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote
this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the
name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized
as well, since that helps me on the commandline.
The name "opn" stands for "output program name".
Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn,
and Opn has only one method called opn().
If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more
useful for others, please drop me an email at:
shevegen@gmail.com
Thank you.
opn (1.0.52)https://bundler.rubygems.org/gems/opn/versions/1.0.522019-11-27T17:49:28ZRobert A. HeilerThis library is called opn. It will simply output the name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another namespace to report with. For an explanation, just look at the few examples under the test/ directory. Why did I write it? I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized as well, since that helps me on the commandline. The name "opn" stands for "output program name". Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn, and Opn has only one method called opn(). If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more useful for others, please drop me an email at: shevegen@gmail.com Thank you.
This library is called opn. It will simply output the
name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another
namespace to report with. For an explanation, just
look at the few examples under the test/ directory.
Why did I write it?
I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will
report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote
this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the
name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized
as well, since that helps me on the commandline.
The name "opn" stands for "output program name".
Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn,
and Opn has only one method called opn().
If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more
useful for others, please drop me an email at:
shevegen@gmail.com
Thank you.
opn (1.0.51)https://bundler.rubygems.org/gems/opn/versions/1.0.512019-08-28T21:14:55ZRobert A. HeilerThis library is called opn. It will simply output the name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another namespace to report with. For an explanation, just look at the few examples under the test/ directory. Why did I write it? I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized as well, since that helps me on the commandline. The name "opn" stands for "output program name". Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn, and Opn has only one method called opn(). If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more useful for others, please drop me an email at: shevegen@gmail.com Thank you.
This library is called opn. It will simply output the
name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another
namespace to report with. For an explanation, just
look at the few examples under the test/ directory.
Why did I write it?
I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will
report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote
this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the
name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized
as well, since that helps me on the commandline.
The name "opn" stands for "output program name".
Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn,
and Opn has only one method called opn().
If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more
useful for others, please drop me an email at:
shevegen@gmail.com
Thank you.
opn (1.0.50)https://bundler.rubygems.org/gems/opn/versions/1.0.502019-08-28T21:08:06ZRobert A. HeilerThis library is called opn. It will simply output the name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another namespace to report with. For an explanation, just look at the few examples under the test/ directory. Why did I write it? I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized as well, since that helps me on the commandline. The name "opn" stands for "output program name". Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn, and Opn has only one method called opn(). If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more useful for others, please drop me an email at: shevegen@gmail.com Thank you.
This library is called opn. It will simply output the
name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another
namespace to report with. For an explanation, just
look at the few examples under the test/ directory.
Why did I write it?
I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will
report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote
this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the
name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized
as well, since that helps me on the commandline.
The name "opn" stands for "output program name".
Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn,
and Opn has only one method called opn().
If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more
useful for others, please drop me an email at:
shevegen@gmail.com
Thank you.
opn (1.0.49)https://bundler.rubygems.org/gems/opn/versions/1.0.492019-08-28T12:32:21ZRobert A. HeilerThis library is called opn. It will simply output the name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another namespace to report with. For an explanation, just look at the few examples under the test/ directory. Why did I write it? I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized as well, since that helps me on the commandline. The name "opn" stands for "output program name". Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn, and Opn has only one method called opn(). If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more useful for others, please drop me an email at: shevegen@gmail.com Thank you.
This library is called opn. It will simply output the
name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another
namespace to report with. For an explanation, just
look at the few examples under the test/ directory.
Why did I write it?
I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will
report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote
this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the
name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized
as well, since that helps me on the commandline.
The name "opn" stands for "output program name".
Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn,
and Opn has only one method called opn().
If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more
useful for others, please drop me an email at:
shevegen@gmail.com
Thank you.
opn (1.0.48)https://bundler.rubygems.org/gems/opn/versions/1.0.482019-04-05T16:43:18ZRobert A. HeilerThis library is called opn. It will simply output the name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another namespace to report with. For an explanation, just look at the few examples under the test/ directory. Why did I write it? I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized as well, since that helps me on the commandline. The name "opn" stands for "output program name". Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn, and Opn has only one method called opn(). If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more useful for others, please drop me an email at: shevegen@gmail.com Thank you.
This library is called opn. It will simply output the
name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another
namespace to report with. For an explanation, just
look at the few examples under the test/ directory.
Why did I write it?
I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will
report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote
this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the
name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized
as well, since that helps me on the commandline.
The name "opn" stands for "output program name".
Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn,
and Opn has only one method called opn().
If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more
useful for others, please drop me an email at:
shevegen@gmail.com
Thank you.
opn (1.0.47)https://bundler.rubygems.org/gems/opn/versions/1.0.472019-02-05T12:32:58ZRobert A. HeilerThis library is called opn. It will simply output the name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another namespace to report with. For an explanation, just look at the few examples under the test/ directory. Why did I write it? I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized as well, since that helps me on the commandline. The name "opn" stands for "output program name". Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn, and Opn has only one method called opn(). If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more useful for others, please drop me an email at: shevegen@gmail.com Thank you.
This library is called opn. It will simply output the
name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another
namespace to report with. For an explanation, just
look at the few examples under the test/ directory.
Why did I write it?
I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will
report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote
this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the
name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized
as well, since that helps me on the commandline.
The name "opn" stands for "output program name".
Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn,
and Opn has only one method called opn().
If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more
useful for others, please drop me an email at:
shevegen@gmail.com
Thank you.
opn (1.0.46)https://bundler.rubygems.org/gems/opn/versions/1.0.462019-02-05T12:27:33ZRobert A. HeilerThis library is called opn. It will simply output the name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another namespace to report with. For an explanation, just look at the few examples under the test/ directory. Why did I write it? I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized as well, since that helps me on the commandline. The name "opn" stands for "output program name". Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn, and Opn has only one method called opn(). If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more useful for others, please drop me an email at: shevegen@gmail.com Thank you.
This library is called opn. It will simply output the
name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another
namespace to report with. For an explanation, just
look at the few examples under the test/ directory.
Why did I write it?
I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will
report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote
this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the
name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized
as well, since that helps me on the commandline.
The name "opn" stands for "output program name".
Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn,
and Opn has only one method called opn().
If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more
useful for others, please drop me an email at:
shevegen@gmail.com
Thank you.
opn (1.0.45)https://bundler.rubygems.org/gems/opn/versions/1.0.452019-02-02T16:13:24ZRobert A. HeilerThis library is called opn. It will simply output the name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another namespace to report with. For an explanation, just look at the few examples under the test/ directory. Why did I write it? I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized as well, since that helps me on the commandline. The name "opn" stands for "output program name". Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn, and Opn has only one method called opn(). If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more useful for others, please drop me an email at: shevegen@gmail.com Thank you.
This library is called opn. It will simply output the
name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another
namespace to report with. For an explanation, just
look at the few examples under the test/ directory.
Why did I write it?
I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will
report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote
this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the
name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized
as well, since that helps me on the commandline.
The name "opn" stands for "output program name".
Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn,
and Opn has only one method called opn().
If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more
useful for others, please drop me an email at:
shevegen@gmail.com
Thank you.
opn (1.0.44)https://bundler.rubygems.org/gems/opn/versions/1.0.442019-01-16T03:34:36ZRobert A. HeilerThis library is called opn. It will simply output the name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another namespace to report with. For an explanation, just look at the few examples under the test/ directory. Why did I write it? I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized as well, since that helps me on the commandline. The name "opn" stands for "output program name". Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn, and Opn has only one method called opn(). If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more useful for others, please drop me an email at: shevegen@gmail.com Thank you.
This library is called opn. It will simply output the
name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another
namespace to report with. For an explanation, just
look at the few examples under the test/ directory.
Why did I write it?
I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will
report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote
this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the
name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized
as well, since that helps me on the commandline.
The name "opn" stands for "output program name".
Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn,
and Opn has only one method called opn().
If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more
useful for others, please drop me an email at:
shevegen@gmail.com
Thank you.
opn (1.0.43)https://bundler.rubygems.org/gems/opn/versions/1.0.432018-12-13T19:29:33ZRobert A. HeilerThis library is called opn. It will simply output the name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another namespace to report with. For an explanation, just look at the few examples under the test/ directory. Why did I write it? I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized as well, since that helps me on the commandline. The name "opn" stands for "output program name". Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn, and Opn has only one method called opn(). If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more useful for others, please drop me an email at: shevegen@gmail.com Thank you.
This library is called opn. It will simply output the
name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another
namespace to report with. For an explanation, just
look at the few examples under the test/ directory.
Why did I write it?
I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will
report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote
this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the
name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized
as well, since that helps me on the commandline.
The name "opn" stands for "output program name".
Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn,
and Opn has only one method called opn().
If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more
useful for others, please drop me an email at:
shevegen@gmail.com
Thank you.
opn (1.0.42)https://bundler.rubygems.org/gems/opn/versions/1.0.422018-10-17T19:05:59ZRobert A. HeilerThis library is called opn. It will simply output the name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another namespace to report with. For an explanation, just look at the few examples under the test/ directory. Why did I write it? I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized as well, since that helps me on the commandline. The name "opn" stands for "output program name". Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn, and Opn has only one method called opn(). If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more useful for others, please drop me an email at: shevegen@gmail.com Thank you.
This library is called opn. It will simply output the
name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another
namespace to report with. For an explanation, just
look at the few examples under the test/ directory.
Why did I write it?
I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will
report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote
this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the
name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized
as well, since that helps me on the commandline.
The name "opn" stands for "output program name".
Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn,
and Opn has only one method called opn().
If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more
useful for others, please drop me an email at:
shevegen@gmail.com
Thank you.
opn (1.0.41)https://bundler.rubygems.org/gems/opn/versions/1.0.412018-09-20T13:00:37ZRobert A. HeilerThis library is called opn. It will simply output the name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another namespace to report with. For an explanation, just look at the few examples under the test/ directory. Why did I write it? I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized as well, since that helps me on the commandline. The name "opn" stands for "output program name". Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn, and Opn has only one method called opn(). If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more useful for others, please drop me an email at: shevegen@gmail.com Thank you.
This library is called opn. It will simply output the
name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another
namespace to report with. For an explanation, just
look at the few examples under the test/ directory.
Why did I write it?
I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will
report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote
this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the
name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized
as well, since that helps me on the commandline.
The name "opn" stands for "output program name".
Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn,
and Opn has only one method called opn().
If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more
useful for others, please drop me an email at:
shevegen@gmail.com
Thank you.
opn (1.0.40)https://bundler.rubygems.org/gems/opn/versions/1.0.402018-06-09T10:27:56ZRobert A. HeilerThis library is called opn. It will simply output the name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another namespace to report with. For an explanation, just look at the few examples under the test/ directory. Why did I write it? I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized as well, since that helps me on the commandline. The name "opn" stands for "output program name". Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn, and Opn has only one method called opn(). If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more useful for others, please drop me an email at: shevegen@gmail.com Thank you.
This library is called opn. It will simply output the
name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another
namespace to report with. For an explanation, just
look at the few examples under the test/ directory.
Why did I write it?
I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will
report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote
this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the
name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized
as well, since that helps me on the commandline.
The name "opn" stands for "output program name".
Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn,
and Opn has only one method called opn().
If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more
useful for others, please drop me an email at:
shevegen@gmail.com
Thank you.
opn (1.0.39)https://bundler.rubygems.org/gems/opn/versions/1.0.392018-04-10T15:43:17ZRobert A. HeilerThis library is called opn. It will simply output the name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another namespace to report with. For an explanation, just look at the few examples under the test/ directory. Why did I write it? I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized as well, since that helps me on the commandline. The name "opn" stands for "output program name". Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn, and Opn has only one method called opn(). If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more useful for others, please drop me an email at: shevegen@gmail.com Thank you.
This library is called opn. It will simply output the
name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another
namespace to report with. For an explanation, just
look at the few examples under the test/ directory.
Why did I write it?
I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will
report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote
this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the
name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized
as well, since that helps me on the commandline.
The name "opn" stands for "output program name".
Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn,
and Opn has only one method called opn().
If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more
useful for others, please drop me an email at:
shevegen@gmail.com
Thank you.
opn (1.0.38)https://bundler.rubygems.org/gems/opn/versions/1.0.382018-03-03T01:35:29ZRobert A. HeilerThis library is called opn. It will simply output the name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another namespace to report with. For an explanation, just look at the few examples under the test/ directory. Why did I write it? I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized as well, since that helps me on the commandline. The name "opn" stands for "output program name". Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn, and Opn has only one method called opn(). If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more useful for others, please drop me an email at: shevegen@gmail.com Thank you.
This library is called opn. It will simply output the
name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another
namespace to report with. For an explanation, just
look at the few examples under the test/ directory.
Why did I write it?
I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will
report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote
this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the
name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized
as well, since that helps me on the commandline.
The name "opn" stands for "output program name".
Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn,
and Opn has only one method called opn().
If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more
useful for others, please drop me an email at:
shevegen@gmail.com
Thank you.
opn (1.0.37)https://bundler.rubygems.org/gems/opn/versions/1.0.372018-03-03T01:33:54ZRobert A. HeilerThis library is called opn. It will simply output the name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another namespace to report with. For an explanation, just look at the few examples under the test/ directory. Why did I write it? I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized as well, since that helps me on the commandline. The name "opn" stands for "output program name". Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn, and Opn has only one method called opn(). If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more useful for others, please drop me an email at: shevegen@gmail.com Thank you.
This library is called opn. It will simply output the
name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another
namespace to report with. For an explanation, just
look at the few examples under the test/ directory.
Why did I write it?
I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will
report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote
this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the
name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized
as well, since that helps me on the commandline.
The name "opn" stands for "output program name".
Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn,
and Opn has only one method called opn().
If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more
useful for others, please drop me an email at:
shevegen@gmail.com
Thank you.
opn (1.0.36)https://bundler.rubygems.org/gems/opn/versions/1.0.362017-11-27T20:20:45ZRobert A. HeilerThis library is called opn. It will simply output the name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another namespace to report with. For an explanation, just look at the few examples under the test/ directory. Why did I write it? I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized as well, since that helps me on the commandline. The name "opn" stands for "output program name". Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn, and Opn has only one method called opn(). If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more useful for others, please drop me an email at: shevegen@gmail.com Thank you.
This library is called opn. It will simply output the
name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another
namespace to report with. For an explanation, just
look at the few examples under the test/ directory.
Why did I write it?
I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will
report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote
this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the
name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized
as well, since that helps me on the commandline.
The name "opn" stands for "output program name".
Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn,
and Opn has only one method called opn().
If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more
useful for others, please drop me an email at:
shevegen@gmail.com
Thank you.
opn (1.0.35)https://bundler.rubygems.org/gems/opn/versions/1.0.352017-09-06T17:55:42ZRobert A. HeilerThis library is called opn. It will simply output the name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another namespace to report with. For an explanation, just look at the few examples under the test/ directory. Why did I write it? I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized as well, since that helps me on the commandline. The name "opn" stands for "output program name". Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn, and Opn has only one method called opn(). If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more useful for others, please drop me an email at: shevegen@gmail.com Thank you.
This library is called opn. It will simply output the
name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another
namespace to report with. For an explanation, just
look at the few examples under the test/ directory.
Why did I write it?
I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will
report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote
this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the
name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized
as well, since that helps me on the commandline.
The name "opn" stands for "output program name".
Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn,
and Opn has only one method called opn().
If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more
useful for others, please drop me an email at:
shevegen@gmail.com
Thank you.
opn (1.0.34)https://bundler.rubygems.org/gems/opn/versions/1.0.342017-09-06T17:53:31ZRobert A. HeilerThis library is called opn. It will simply output the name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another namespace to report with. For an explanation, just look at the few examples under the test/ directory. Why did I write it? I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized as well, since that helps me on the commandline. The name "opn" stands for "output program name". Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn, and Opn has only one method called opn(). If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more useful for others, please drop me an email at: shevegen@gmail.com Thank you.
This library is called opn. It will simply output the
name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another
namespace to report with. For an explanation, just
look at the few examples under the test/ directory.
Why did I write it?
I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will
report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote
this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the
name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized
as well, since that helps me on the commandline.
The name "opn" stands for "output program name".
Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn,
and Opn has only one method called opn().
If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more
useful for others, please drop me an email at:
shevegen@gmail.com
Thank you.
opn (1.0.33)https://bundler.rubygems.org/gems/opn/versions/1.0.332017-09-04T17:42:48ZRobert A. HeilerThis library is called opn. It will simply output the name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another namespace to report with. For an explanation, just look at the few examples under the test/ directory. Why did I write it? I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized as well, since that helps me on the commandline. The name "opn" stands for "output program name". Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn, and Opn has only one method called opn(). If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more useful for others, please drop me an email at: shevegen@gmail.com Thank you.
This library is called opn. It will simply output the
name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another
namespace to report with. For an explanation, just
look at the few examples under the test/ directory.
Why did I write it?
I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will
report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote
this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the
name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized
as well, since that helps me on the commandline.
The name "opn" stands for "output program name".
Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn,
and Opn has only one method called opn().
If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more
useful for others, please drop me an email at:
shevegen@gmail.com
Thank you.
opn (1.0.32)https://bundler.rubygems.org/gems/opn/versions/1.0.322017-07-03T19:04:53ZRobert A. HeilerThis library is called opn. It will simply output the name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another namespace to report with. For an explanation, just look at the few examples under the test/ directory. Why did I write it? I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized as well, since that helps me on the commandline. The name "opn" stands for "output program name". Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn, and Opn has only one method called opn(). If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more useful for others, please drop me an email at: shevegen@gmail.com Thank you.
This library is called opn. It will simply output the
name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another
namespace to report with. For an explanation, just
look at the few examples under the test/ directory.
Why did I write it?
I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will
report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote
this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the
name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized
as well, since that helps me on the commandline.
The name "opn" stands for "output program name".
Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn,
and Opn has only one method called opn().
If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more
useful for others, please drop me an email at:
shevegen@gmail.com
Thank you.
opn (1.0.31)https://bundler.rubygems.org/gems/opn/versions/1.0.312017-07-03T19:00:11ZRobert A. HeilerThis library is called opn. It will simply output the name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another namespace to report with. For an explanation, just look at the few examples under the test/ directory. Why did I write it? I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized as well, since that helps me on the commandline. The name "opn" stands for "output program name". Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn, and Opn has only one method called opn(). If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more useful for others, please drop me an email at: shevegen@gmail.com Thank you.
This library is called opn. It will simply output the
name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another
namespace to report with. For an explanation, just
look at the few examples under the test/ directory.
Why did I write it?
I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will
report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote
this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the
name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized
as well, since that helps me on the commandline.
The name "opn" stands for "output program name".
Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn,
and Opn has only one method called opn().
If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more
useful for others, please drop me an email at:
shevegen@gmail.com
Thank you.
opn (1.0.30)https://bundler.rubygems.org/gems/opn/versions/1.0.302017-06-25T12:29:33ZRobert A. HeilerThis library is called opn. It will simply output the name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another namespace to report with. For an explanation, just look at the few examples under the test/ directory. Why did I write it? I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized as well, since that helps me on the commandline. The name "opn" stands for "output program name". Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn, and Opn has only one method called opn(). If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more useful for others, please drop me an email at: shevegen@gmail.com Thank you.
This library is called opn. It will simply output the
name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another
namespace to report with. For an explanation, just
look at the few examples under the test/ directory.
Why did I write it?
I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will
report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote
this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the
name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized
as well, since that helps me on the commandline.
The name "opn" stands for "output program name".
Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn,
and Opn has only one method called opn().
If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more
useful for others, please drop me an email at:
shevegen@gmail.com
Thank you.
opn (1.0.29)https://bundler.rubygems.org/gems/opn/versions/1.0.292017-06-19T12:57:53ZRobert A. HeilerThis library is called opn. It will simply output the name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another namespace to report with. For an explanation, just look at the few examples under the test/ directory. Why did I write it? I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized as well, since that helps me on the commandline. The name "opn" stands for "output program name". Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn, and Opn has only one method called opn(). If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more useful for others, please drop me an email at: shevegen@gmail.com Thank you.
This library is called opn. It will simply output the
name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another
namespace to report with. For an explanation, just
look at the few examples under the test/ directory.
Why did I write it?
I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will
report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote
this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the
name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized
as well, since that helps me on the commandline.
The name "opn" stands for "output program name".
Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn,
and Opn has only one method called opn().
If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more
useful for others, please drop me an email at:
shevegen@gmail.com
Thank you.
opn (1.0.28)https://bundler.rubygems.org/gems/opn/versions/1.0.282017-06-16T23:27:52ZRobert A. HeilerThis library is called opn. It will simply output the name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another namespace to report with. For an explanation, just look at the few examples under the test/ directory. Why did I write it? I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized as well, since that helps me on the commandline. The name "opn" stands for "output program name". Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn, and Opn has only one method called opn(). If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more useful for others, please drop me an email at: shevegen@gmail.com Thank you.
This library is called opn. It will simply output the
name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another
namespace to report with. For an explanation, just
look at the few examples under the test/ directory.
Why did I write it?
I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will
report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote
this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the
name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized
as well, since that helps me on the commandline.
The name "opn" stands for "output program name".
Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn,
and Opn has only one method called opn().
If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more
useful for others, please drop me an email at:
shevegen@gmail.com
Thank you.
opn (1.0.27)https://bundler.rubygems.org/gems/opn/versions/1.0.272017-05-31T09:56:10ZRobert A. HeilerThis library is called opn. It will simply output the name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another namespace to report with. For an explanation, just look at the few examples under the test/ directory. Why did I write it? I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized as well, since that helps me on the commandline. The name "opn" stands for "output program name". Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn, and Opn has only one method called opn(). If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more useful for others, please drop me an email at: shevegen@gmail.com Thank you.
This library is called opn. It will simply output the
name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another
namespace to report with. For an explanation, just
look at the few examples under the test/ directory.
Why did I write it?
I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will
report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote
this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the
name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized
as well, since that helps me on the commandline.
The name "opn" stands for "output program name".
Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn,
and Opn has only one method called opn().
If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more
useful for others, please drop me an email at:
shevegen@gmail.com
Thank you.
opn (1.0.26)https://bundler.rubygems.org/gems/opn/versions/1.0.262016-11-10T20:56:14ZRobert A. HeilerThis library is called opn. It will simply output the name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another namespace to report with. For an explanation, just look at the few examples under the test/ directory. Why did I write it? I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized as well, since that helps me on the commandline. The name "opn" stands for "output program name". Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn, and Opn has only one method called opn(). If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more useful for others, please drop me an email at: shevegen@gmail.com Thank you.
This library is called opn. It will simply output the
name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another
namespace to report with. For an explanation, just
look at the few examples under the test/ directory.
Why did I write it?
I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will
report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote
this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the
name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized
as well, since that helps me on the commandline.
The name "opn" stands for "output program name".
Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn,
and Opn has only one method called opn().
If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more
useful for others, please drop me an email at:
shevegen@gmail.com
Thank you.
opn (1.0.25)https://bundler.rubygems.org/gems/opn/versions/1.0.252016-05-30T23:21:48ZRobert A. HeilerThis library is called opn. It will simply output the name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another namespace to report with. For an explanation, just look at the few examples under the test/ directory. Why did I write it? I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized as well, since that helps me on the commandline. The name "opn" stands for "output program name". Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn, and Opn has only one method called opn(). If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more useful for others, please drop me an email at: shevegen@gmail.com Thank you.
This library is called opn. It will simply output the
name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another
namespace to report with. For an explanation, just
look at the few examples under the test/ directory.
Why did I write it?
I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will
report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote
this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the
name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized
as well, since that helps me on the commandline.
The name "opn" stands for "output program name".
Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn,
and Opn has only one method called opn().
If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more
useful for others, please drop me an email at:
shevegen@gmail.com
Thank you.
opn (1.0.24)https://bundler.rubygems.org/gems/opn/versions/1.0.242016-01-01T22:41:54ZRobert A. HeilerThis library is called opn. It will simply output the name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another namespace to report with. For an explanation, just look at the few examples under the test/ directory. Why did I write it? I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized as well, since that helps me on the commandline. The name "opn" stands for "output program name". Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn, and Opn has only one method called opn(). If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more useful for others, please drop me an email at: shevegen@gmail.com Thank you.
This library is called opn. It will simply output the
name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another
namespace to report with. For an explanation, just
look at the few examples under the test/ directory.
Why did I write it?
I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will
report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote
this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the
name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized
as well, since that helps me on the commandline.
The name "opn" stands for "output program name".
Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn,
and Opn has only one method called opn().
If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more
useful for others, please drop me an email at:
shevegen@gmail.com
Thank you.
opn (1.0.23)https://bundler.rubygems.org/gems/opn/versions/1.0.232015-12-26T04:40:57ZRobert A. HeilerThis library is called opn. It will simply output the name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another namespace to report with. For an explanation, just look at the few examples under the test/ directory. Why did I write it? I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized as well, since that helps me on the commandline. The name "opn" stands for "output program name". Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn, and Opn has only one method called opn(). If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more useful for others, please drop me an email at: shevegen@gmail.com Thank you.
This library is called opn. It will simply output the
name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another
namespace to report with. For an explanation, just
look at the few examples under the test/ directory.
Why did I write it?
I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will
report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote
this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the
name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized
as well, since that helps me on the commandline.
The name "opn" stands for "output program name".
Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn,
and Opn has only one method called opn().
If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more
useful for others, please drop me an email at:
shevegen@gmail.com
Thank you.
opn (1.0.22)https://bundler.rubygems.org/gems/opn/versions/1.0.222015-12-25T03:26:02ZRobert A. HeilerThis library is called opn. It will simply output the name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another namespace to report with. For an explanation, just look at the few examples under the test/ directory. Why did I write it? I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized as well, since that helps me on the commandline. The name "opn" stands for "output program name". Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn, and Opn has only one method called opn(). If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more useful for others, please drop me an email at: shevegen@gmail.com Thank you.
This library is called opn. It will simply output the
name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another
namespace to report with. For an explanation, just
look at the few examples under the test/ directory.
Why did I write it?
I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will
report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote
this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the
name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized
as well, since that helps me on the commandline.
The name "opn" stands for "output program name".
Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn,
and Opn has only one method called opn().
If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more
useful for others, please drop me an email at:
shevegen@gmail.com
Thank you.
opn (1.0.21)https://bundler.rubygems.org/gems/opn/versions/1.0.212015-11-14T04:00:44ZRobert A. HeilerThis library is called opn. It will simply output the name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another namespace to report with. For an explanation, just look at the few examples under the test/ directory. Why did I write it? I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized as well, since that helps me on the commandline. The name "opn" stands for "output program name". Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn, and Opn has only one method called opn(). If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more useful for others, please drop me an email at: shevegen@gmail.com Thank you.
This library is called opn. It will simply output the
name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another
namespace to report with. For an explanation, just
look at the few examples under the test/ directory.
Why did I write it?
I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will
report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote
this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the
name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized
as well, since that helps me on the commandline.
The name "opn" stands for "output program name".
Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn,
and Opn has only one method called opn().
If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more
useful for others, please drop me an email at:
shevegen@gmail.com
Thank you.
opn (1.0.20)https://bundler.rubygems.org/gems/opn/versions/1.0.202015-10-31T23:21:13ZRobert A. HeilerThis library is called opn. It will simply output the name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another namespace to report with. For an explanation, just look at the few examples under the test/ directory. Why did I write it? I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized as well, since that helps me on the commandline. The name "opn" stands for "output program name". Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn, and Opn has only one method called opn(). If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more useful for others, please drop me an email at: shevegen@gmail.com Thank you.
This library is called opn. It will simply output the
name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another
namespace to report with. For an explanation, just
look at the few examples under the test/ directory.
Why did I write it?
I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will
report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote
this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the
name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized
as well, since that helps me on the commandline.
The name "opn" stands for "output program name".
Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn,
and Opn has only one method called opn().
If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more
useful for others, please drop me an email at:
shevegen@gmail.com
Thank you.
opn (1.0.19)https://bundler.rubygems.org/gems/opn/versions/1.0.192015-10-22T18:54:46ZRobert A. HeilerThis library is called opn. It will simply output the name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another namespace to report with. For an explanation, just look at the few examples under the test/ directory. Why did I write it? I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized as well, since that helps me on the commandline. The name "opn" stands for "output program name". Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn, and Opn has only one method called opn(). If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more useful for others, please drop me an email at: shevegen@gmail.com Thank you.
This library is called opn. It will simply output the
name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another
namespace to report with. For an explanation, just
look at the few examples under the test/ directory.
Why did I write it?
I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will
report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote
this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the
name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized
as well, since that helps me on the commandline.
The name "opn" stands for "output program name".
Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn,
and Opn has only one method called opn().
If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more
useful for others, please drop me an email at:
shevegen@gmail.com
Thank you.
opn (1.0.18)https://bundler.rubygems.org/gems/opn/versions/1.0.182015-10-17T03:14:41ZRobert A. HeilerThis library is called opn. It will simply output the name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another namespace to report with. For an explanation, just look at the few examples under the test/ directory. Why did I write it? I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized as well, since that helps me on the commandline. The name "opn" stands for "output program name". Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn, and Opn has only one method called opn(). If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more useful for others, please drop me an email at: shevegen@gmail.com Thank you.
This library is called opn. It will simply output the
name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another
namespace to report with. For an explanation, just
look at the few examples under the test/ directory.
Why did I write it?
I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will
report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote
this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the
name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized
as well, since that helps me on the commandline.
The name "opn" stands for "output program name".
Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn,
and Opn has only one method called opn().
If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more
useful for others, please drop me an email at:
shevegen@gmail.com
Thank you.
opn (1.0.17)https://bundler.rubygems.org/gems/opn/versions/1.0.172015-10-17T03:10:39ZRobert A. HeilerThis library is called opn. It will simply output the name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another namespace to report with. For an explanation, just look at the few examples under the test/ directory. Why did I write it? I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized as well, since that helps me on the commandline. The name "opn" stands for "output program name". Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn, and Opn has only one method called opn(). If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more useful for others, please drop me an email at: shevegen@gmail.com Thank you.
This library is called opn. It will simply output the
name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another
namespace to report with. For an explanation, just
look at the few examples under the test/ directory.
Why did I write it?
I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will
report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote
this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the
name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized
as well, since that helps me on the commandline.
The name "opn" stands for "output program name".
Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn,
and Opn has only one method called opn().
If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more
useful for others, please drop me an email at:
shevegen@gmail.com
Thank you.
opn (1.0.16)https://bundler.rubygems.org/gems/opn/versions/1.0.162015-10-17T03:05:21ZRobert A. HeilerThis library is called opn. It will simply output the name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another namespace to report with. For an explanation, just look at the few examples under the test/ directory. Why did I write it? I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized as well, since that helps me on the commandline. The name "opn" stands for "output program name". Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn, and Opn has only one method called opn(). If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more useful for others, please drop me an email at: shevegen@gmail.com Thank you.
This library is called opn. It will simply output the
name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another
namespace to report with. For an explanation, just
look at the few examples under the test/ directory.
Why did I write it?
I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will
report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote
this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the
name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized
as well, since that helps me on the commandline.
The name "opn" stands for "output program name".
Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn,
and Opn has only one method called opn().
If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more
useful for others, please drop me an email at:
shevegen@gmail.com
Thank you.
opn (1.0.15)https://bundler.rubygems.org/gems/opn/versions/1.0.152015-10-17T03:00:09ZRobert A. HeilerThis library is called opn. It will simply output the name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another namespace to report with. For an explanation, just look at the few examples under the test/ directory. Why did I write it? I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized as well, since that helps me on the commandline. The name "opn" stands for "output program name". Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn, and Opn has only one method called opn(). If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more useful for others, please drop me an email at: shevegen@gmail.com Thank you.
This library is called opn. It will simply output the
name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another
namespace to report with. For an explanation, just
look at the few examples under the test/ directory.
Why did I write it?
I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will
report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote
this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the
name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized
as well, since that helps me on the commandline.
The name "opn" stands for "output program name".
Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn,
and Opn has only one method called opn().
If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more
useful for others, please drop me an email at:
shevegen@gmail.com
Thank you.
opn (1.0.14)https://bundler.rubygems.org/gems/opn/versions/1.0.142015-09-14T16:00:18ZRobert A. HeilerThis library is called opn. It will simply output the name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another namespace to report with. For an explanation, just look at the few examples under the test/ directory. Why did I write it? I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized as well, since that helps me on the commandline. The name "opn" stands for "output program name". Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn, and Opn has only one method called opn(). If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more useful for others, please drop me an email at: shevegen@gmail.com Thank you.
This library is called opn. It will simply output the
name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another
namespace to report with. For an explanation, just
look at the few examples under the test/ directory.
Why did I write it?
I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will
report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote
this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the
name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized
as well, since that helps me on the commandline.
The name "opn" stands for "output program name".
Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn,
and Opn has only one method called opn().
If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more
useful for others, please drop me an email at:
shevegen@gmail.com
Thank you.
opn (1.0.13)https://bundler.rubygems.org/gems/opn/versions/1.0.132015-07-25T22:31:10ZRobert A. HeilerThis library is called opn. It will simply output the name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another namespace to report with. For an explanation, just look at the few examples under the test/ directory. Why did I write it? I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized as well, since that helps me on the commandline. The name "opn" stands for "output program name". Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn, and Opn has only one method called opn(). If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more useful for others, please drop me an email at: shevegen@gmail.com Thank you.
This library is called opn. It will simply output the
name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another
namespace to report with. For an explanation, just
look at the few examples under the test/ directory.
Why did I write it?
I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will
report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote
this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the
name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized
as well, since that helps me on the commandline.
The name "opn" stands for "output program name".
Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn,
and Opn has only one method called opn().
If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more
useful for others, please drop me an email at:
shevegen@gmail.com
Thank you.
opn (1.0.12)https://bundler.rubygems.org/gems/opn/versions/1.0.122015-07-21T14:20:39ZRobert A. HeilerThis library is called opn. It will simply output the name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another namespace to report with. For an explanation, just look at the few examples under the test/ directory. Why did I write it? I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized as well, since that helps me on the commandline. The name "opn" stands for "output program name". Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn, and Opn has only one method called opn(). If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more useful for others, please drop me an email at: shevegen@gmail.com Thank you.
This library is called opn. It will simply output the
name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another
namespace to report with. For an explanation, just
look at the few examples under the test/ directory.
Why did I write it?
I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will
report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote
this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the
name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized
as well, since that helps me on the commandline.
The name "opn" stands for "output program name".
Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn,
and Opn has only one method called opn().
If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more
useful for others, please drop me an email at:
shevegen@gmail.com
Thank you.
opn (1.0.11)https://bundler.rubygems.org/gems/opn/versions/1.0.112015-07-15T15:36:49ZRobert A. HeilerThis library is called opn. It will simply output the name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another namespace to report with. For an explanation, just look at the few examples under the test/ directory. Why did I write it? I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized as well, since that helps me on the commandline. The name "opn" stands for "output program name". Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn, and Opn has only one method called opn(). If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more useful for others, please drop me an email at: shevegen@gmail.com Thank you.
This library is called opn. It will simply output the
name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another
namespace to report with. For an explanation, just
look at the few examples under the test/ directory.
Why did I write it?
I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will
report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote
this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the
name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized
as well, since that helps me on the commandline.
The name "opn" stands for "output program name".
Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn,
and Opn has only one method called opn().
If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more
useful for others, please drop me an email at:
shevegen@gmail.com
Thank you.
opn (1.0.10)https://bundler.rubygems.org/gems/opn/versions/1.0.102015-07-15T14:05:37ZRobert A. HeilerThis library is called opn. It will simply output the name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another namespace to report with. For an explanation, just look at the few examples under the test/ directory. Why did I write it? I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized as well, since that helps me on the commandline. The name "opn" stands for "output program name". Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn, and Opn has only one method called opn(). If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more useful for others, please drop me an email at: shevegen@gmail.com Thank you.
This library is called opn. It will simply output the
name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another
namespace to report with. For an explanation, just
look at the few examples under the test/ directory.
Why did I write it?
I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will
report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote
this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the
name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized
as well, since that helps me on the commandline.
The name "opn" stands for "output program name".
Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn,
and Opn has only one method called opn().
If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more
useful for others, please drop me an email at:
shevegen@gmail.com
Thank you.
opn (1.0.9)https://bundler.rubygems.org/gems/opn/versions/1.0.92015-04-27T11:14:04ZRobert A. HeilerThis library is called opn. It will simply output the name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another namespace to report with. For an explanation, just look at the few examples under the test/ directory. Why did I write it? I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized as well, since that helps me on the commandline. Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn, and Opn has only one method called opn(). If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more useful for others, please drop me an email at: shevegen@gmail.com Thank you.
This library is called opn. It will simply output the
name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another
namespace to report with. For an explanation, just
look at the few examples under the test/ directory.
Why did I write it?
I wrote many different ruby classes, and sometimes they will
report information to me, but I don't know which file wrote
this. So I wanted to simply have output prefaced with the
name of the class in question, optionally to be colourized
as well, since that helps me on the commandline.
Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn,
and Opn has only one method called opn().
If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more
useful for others, please drop me an email at:
shevegen@gmail.com
Thank you.
opn (1.0.8)https://bundler.rubygems.org/gems/opn/versions/1.0.82015-03-30T18:13:43ZRobert A. HeilerThis library is called opn. It will simply output the name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another namespace to report with. For an explanation, just look at the few examples under the test/ directory. Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn, and Opn has only one method called opn(). If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more useful for others, please drop me an email at: shevegen@gmail.com Thank you.
This library is called opn. It will simply output the
name of the class. Optionally, you can assign another
namespace to report with. For an explanation, just
look at the few examples under the test/ directory.
Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn,
and Opn has only one method called opn().
If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more
useful for others, please drop me an email at:
shevegen@gmail.com
Thank you.
opn (1.0.7)https://bundler.rubygems.org/gems/opn/versions/1.0.72015-01-16T22:27:44ZRobert A. HeilerIf you have specific suggestions to make this gem more useful for others, please drop me an email at: shevegen@gmail.com Thank you.
This library is called opn. It will simply output the
name of the class.
Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn,
and Opn has only one method called opn().
opn (1.0.6)https://bundler.rubygems.org/gems/opn/versions/1.0.62014-12-31T01:39:02ZRobert A. HeilerIf you have specific suggestions to make this gem more useful for others, please drop me an email at: shevegen@gmail.com Thank you.
This library is called opn. It will simply output the
name of the class.
Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn,
and Opn has only one method called opn().
opn (1.0.5)https://bundler.rubygems.org/gems/opn/versions/1.0.52014-12-31T01:36:58ZRobert A. HeilerIf you have specific suggestions to make this gem more useful for others, please drop me an email at: shevegen@gmail.com Thank you.
This library is called opn. It will simply output the
name of the class.
Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn,
and Opn has only one method called opn().
opn (1.0.4)https://bundler.rubygems.org/gems/opn/versions/1.0.42014-12-31T01:36:21ZRobert A. HeilerIf you have specific suggestions to make this gem more useful for others, please drop me an email at: shevegen@gmail.com Thank you.
This library is called opn. It will simply output the
name of the class.
Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn,
and Opn has only one method called opn().
opn (1.0.3)https://bundler.rubygems.org/gems/opn/versions/1.0.32014-05-13T00:55:05ZRobert A. HeilerIf you have specific suggestions to make this gem more useful for others, please drop me an email at: shevegen@gmail.com Thank you.
This library is called opn. It will simply output the
name of the class.
Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn,
and Opn has only one method called opn().
opn (1.0.2)https://bundler.rubygems.org/gems/opn/versions/1.0.22014-05-12T21:13:09ZRobert A. HeilerIf you have specific suggestions to make this gem more useful for others, please drop me an email at: shevegen@gmail.com Thank you.
This library is called opn. It will simply output the
name of the class.
Version 1.0.2 now has a proper module, called Opn,
and Opn has only one method called opn().
opn (1.0.1)https://bundler.rubygems.org/gems/opn/versions/1.0.12014-03-27T23:48:26ZRobert A. HeilerIf you have specific suggestions to make this gem more useful for others, please drop me an email at: shevegen@gmail.com Thank you.
This library is called opn. It will simply output the
name of the class.
opn (1.0.0)https://bundler.rubygems.org/gems/opn/versions/1.0.02013-10-19T15:48:20ZMarkus HeilerThis project, a single method, will give back the name of a project. If you have specific suggestions to make this gem more useful for others, please drop me an email at: shevegen@gmail.com Thank you.
This library is called opn. It has only one method
which will give back the name of a project.