From a3e4c150486941c05a96c42de074372de4e401c0 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Dimiter Petrov Date: Wed, 18 Mar 2015 21:03:10 +0100 Subject: Change commands in the Getting Started guide to use scripts in bin/ [ci skip] --- guides/source/getting_started.md | 18 +++++++++--------- 1 file changed, 9 insertions(+), 9 deletions(-) diff --git a/guides/source/getting_started.md b/guides/source/getting_started.md index 7cce9c72cb..fe01088b2e 100644 --- a/guides/source/getting_started.md +++ b/guides/source/getting_started.md @@ -321,9 +321,9 @@ root 'welcome#index' application to the welcome controller's index action and `get 'welcome/index'` tells Rails to map requests to to the welcome controller's index action. This was created earlier when you ran the -controller generator (`rails generate controller welcome index`). +controller generator (`bin/rails generate controller welcome index`). -Launch the web server again if you stopped it to generate the controller (`rails +Launch the web server again if you stopped it to generate the controller (`bin/rails server`) and navigate to in your browser. You'll see the "Hello, Rails!" message you put into `app/views/welcome/index.html.erb`, indicating that this new route is indeed going to `WelcomeController`'s `index` @@ -356,7 +356,7 @@ Rails.application.routes.draw do end ``` -If you run `rake routes`, you'll see that it has defined routes for all the +If you run `bin/rake routes`, you'll see that it has defined routes for all the standard RESTful actions. The meaning of the prefix column (and other columns) will be seen later, but for now notice that Rails has inferred the singular form `article` and makes meaningful use of the distinction. @@ -556,7 +556,7 @@ this: In this example, the `articles_path` helper is passed to the `:url` option. To see what Rails will do with this, we look back at the output of -`rake routes`: +`bin/rake routes`: ```bash $ bin/rake routes @@ -666,7 +666,7 @@ models, as that will be done automatically by Active Record. ### Running a Migration -As we've just seen, `rails generate model` created a _database migration_ file +As we've just seen, `bin/rails generate model` created a _database migration_ file inside the `db/migrate` directory. Migrations are Ruby classes that are designed to make it simple to create and modify database tables. Rails uses rake commands to run migrations, and it's possible to undo a migration after @@ -719,7 +719,7 @@ NOTE. Because you're working in the development environment by default, this command will apply to the database defined in the `development` section of your `config/database.yml` file. If you would like to execute migrations in another environment, for instance in production, you must explicitly pass it when -invoking the command: `rake db:migrate RAILS_ENV=production`. +invoking the command: `bin/rake db:migrate RAILS_ENV=production`. ### Saving data in the controller @@ -806,7 +806,7 @@ If you submit the form again now, Rails will complain about not finding the `show` action. That's not very useful though, so let's add the `show` action before proceeding. -As we have seen in the output of `rake routes`, the route for `show` action is +As we have seen in the output of `bin/rake routes`, the route for `show` action is as follows: ``` @@ -868,7 +868,7 @@ Visit and give it a try! ### Listing all articles We still need a way to list all our articles, so let's do that. -The route for this as per output of `rake routes` is: +The route for this as per output of `bin/rake routes` is: ``` articles GET /articles(.:format) articles#index @@ -1363,7 +1363,7 @@ Then do the same for the `app/views/articles/edit.html.erb` view: We're now ready to cover the "D" part of CRUD, deleting articles from the database. Following the REST convention, the route for -deleting articles as per output of `rake routes` is: +deleting articles as per output of `bin/rake routes` is: ```ruby DELETE /articles/:id(.:format) articles#destroy -- cgit v1.2.3