Personally i'm in love with textmate. On Mon, 10 Jan 2005 22:45:48 +0900, Thomas Counsell <tamc2 / cam.ac.uk> wrote: > Depends on your definition of IDE. If it is 'big' then afaik, no. > Nothing cocoa. > > Eclipse runs in java and so looks pretty close to native and the > rubyeclipse plug-in mentioned by Otaku is handy and free, however some > bits of eclipse do feel a bit non-mac. > > If your desire is more limited to text-editor+ then TextMate (ãâ¥ã39) > http://macromates.com/ is pretty handy, and appears to have been > written with ruby and rails top of mind. > > If your desire is even more limited, then SubEthaEdit (free for non > commercial) is very clean - http://www.codingmonkeys.de/subethaedit/ > > If you want something that will allow you to develop native Mac OS X > guis, then you can use Mac's XCode together with rubycocoa > (http://www.fobj.com/rubycocoa/) to draw them. > > As an aside, I have occasionally tinkered with the idea of writing a > 'big' native IDE in rubycocoa. I don't think it would be too hard > given cocoa's handy toolbox of components. If anyone is interested in > collaborating on one, or feels a big need for such a thing, then let me > know. > > Tom > > ---- > Tom Counsell. http://tom.counsell.org > > On 10 Jan 2005, at 00:21, Dr. Scott Steinman wrote: > > > I've noticed that a couple of the cross-platform Ruby IDEs can run on > > Mac OS X, but only at a low level (using X11), not natively (with an > > Aqua interface). > > > > Are any native OS X Ruby IDEs available that are being actively > > developed? > > > > Thank you. > > > > Dr. Scott Steinman > > Southern College of Optometry > > > > -- Tobi http://www.hieraki.org - Open source book authoring http://blog.leetsoft.com - Technical weblog