Project

yesman

0.0
No commit activity in last 3 years
No release in over 3 years
CLI for quick creation of C++ projects using GTest
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 Dependencies

Runtime

~> 1.2.2
~> 0.8.5
~> 0.4.4
 Project Readme

=======

yesman

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Yesman is a ruby command line interface that creates basic directory structures for starting a C++ project. As a part of the creation of a new project Yesman will download, compile and generally get Google Test setup for the projects testing suite.

Installation

To install it simply run:

$ gem install yesman

Usage

To create a default project simply run:

$ yesman new ProjectName

Doing so will create a "ProjectName" directory with a "src", "tests", "bin" directory. GoogleTests will be compiled into a "gtest" directory inside of the "tests" directory. A main test runner file named "ProjectNameTests.cpp" will be created inside of the "tests" directory and a "ProjectName.cpp" file will be created in your "src" directory.

There are several optional parameters you can use that will adjust the following:

-s Source Directory Name (defaults to "src")

-t Tests Directory Name (defaults to "tests")

-o Output Directory Name (defaults to "bin")

-e C++ extension to use for generated files (defaults to "cpp")

To generate class files (along with headers and tests) from inside of your project directory run:

$ yesman generate "jsk::SuperClass<jsk::BaseClass"

The string passed to generate (also aliased to 'g') will create your class file, header, and test file. The format is:

"namespace::ClassName<namespace::ParentClass"

Namespaces and inheritance are optional, so you could just as easily run:

$ yesman g "SuperClass<BaseClass

or

$ yesman g "SuperClass"

Requirements

Under the hood there are several technologies that Yesman relies on. In order to run you will need the following:

G++ - You can get this by installing XCode on your mac, be sure to install the command line tools

svn - In order to pull down Google Test you will need to have svn installed on your machine

ruby > 1.9 - OS X is still shipping with 1.8.7. Use rvm to install the latest version of ruby

Contributing

  1. Fork it
  2. Create your feature branch (git checkout -b my-new-feature)
  3. Commit your changes (git commit -am 'Add some feature')
  4. Push to the branch (git push origin my-new-feature)
  5. Create new Pull Request