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spree-api-client's Introduction

Build Status

** Beware: very alpha and untested **

A rubygem for interacting with the Spree API: http://api.spreecommerce.com/v1/

Heavily inspired by the excellent Octokit: https://github.com/pengwynn/octokit

Installation

Add this line to your application's Gemfile:

gem 'spree-api-client'

And then execute:

$ bundle

Or install it yourself as:

$ gem install spree-api-client

Usage

client = Spree::API::Client.new('http://example/api', 'yourapitokenstring')
products = client.products

TODO

  • More tests
  • Mock web requests in tests
  • documentation
  • rdoc generation
  • release to rubygems.org
  • gemnasium
  • code climate
  • Error handling
  • Autopagination?

Development

Source hosted at GitHub. Report Issues/Feature requests on GitHub Issues.

Tests can be ran with rake spec

Note on Patches/Pull Requests

  • Fork the project.
  • Make your feature addition or bug fix.
  • Add tests for it. This is important so I don't break it in a future version unintentionally.
  • Commit, do not mess with rakefile, version, or history. (if you want to have your own version, that is fine but bump version in a commit by itself I can ignore when I pull)
  • Send me a pull request. Bonus points for topic branches.

Copyright

Copyright (c) 2013 Andrew Nesbitt. See LICENSE for details.

spree-api-client's People

Contributors

andrew avatar jbourassa avatar phildionne avatar

Stargazers

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Watchers

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spree-api-client's Issues

License missing from gemspec

RubyGems.org doesn't report a license for your gem. This is because it is not specified in the gemspec of your last release.

via e.g.

spec.license = 'MIT'
# or
spec.licenses = ['MIT', 'GPL-2']

Including a license in your gemspec is an easy way for rubygems.org and other tools to check how your gem is licensed. As you can image, scanning your repository for a LICENSE file or parsing the README, and then attempting to identify the license or licenses is much more difficult and more error prone. So, even for projects that already specify a license, including a license in your gemspec is a good practice. See, for example, how rubygems.org uses the gemspec to display the rails gem license.

There is even a License Finder gem to help companies/individuals ensure all gems they use meet their licensing needs. This tool depends on license information being available in the gemspec. This is an important enough issue that even Bundler now generates gems with a default 'MIT' license.

I hope you'll consider specifying a license in your gemspec. If not, please just close the issue with a nice message. In either case, I'll follow up. Thanks for your time!

Appendix:

If you need help choosing a license (sorry, I haven't checked your readme or looked for a license file), GitHub has created a license picker tool. Code without a license specified defaults to 'All rights reserved'-- denying others all rights to use of the code.
Here's a list of the license names I've found and their frequencies

p.s. In case you're wondering how I found you and why I made this issue, it's because I'm collecting stats on gems (I was originally looking for download data) and decided to collect license metadata,too, and make issues for gemspecs not specifying a license as a public service :). See the previous link or my blog post about this project for more information.

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