libcruby-sys

Ruby bindings


Keywords
helix, ruby, rust
License
ISC

Documentation

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Helix

Helix allows you to write Ruby classes in Rust without having to write the glue code yourself.

ruby! {
    class Console {
        def log(string: String) {
            println!("LOG: {}", string);
        }
    }
}
$ rake build
$ bundle exec irb
>> require "console"
>> Console.log("I'm in your Rust")
LOG: I'm in your Rust
 => nil

Why Helix?

Read the Introducing Helix blog post for a quick introduction to the project!

Getting Started

https://usehelix.com/getting_started

Demos

https://usehelix.com/demos

Roadmap

https://usehelix.com/roadmap

Compatibility

Helix has been tested with the following, though other combinations may also work.

  • cargo 0.18.0 (fe7b0cdcf 2017-04-24)
  • rustc 1.17.0 (56124baa9 2017-04-24)
  • ruby 2.4.1p111 (2017-03-22 revision 58053) [x86_64-darwin16]
  • Bundler version 1.14.6

Contributing

If you'd like to experiment with Helix, you can start with some of the examples in this repository.

Clone and download the Helix repository:

$ git clone https://github.com/tildeio/helix
$ cd helix

Navigate to the console example folder and bundle your Gemfile:

$ cd examples/console
$ bundle install

Run rake irb to build and start irb:

$ bundle exec rake irb

Try running some of the methods defined in examples/console/src/lib.rs:

> c = Console.new
Console { helix: VALUE(0x7fdacc19a6a0) }
 =>
> c.hello
hello
 => nil
> c.loglog('hello', 'world')
hello world
 => nil