Where is the NUnit.Mocks documentation? [closed] - documentation

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Where is the documentation for NUnit's mocking library, NUnit.Mocks?
I can't find anything in their official documentation or wiki.

As I have been told recently Nunit.Mocks are not meant to be used for serious applications. Given it's obvious limitations you're better off with a different framework anyway...

NUnit.Mocks was originally developed for internal use in NUnit's own
tests, although we no longer use it for that purpose.
In addition, it has been useful as a teaching tool, allowing users to
gain familiarity with mocking techniques before moving on to more
serious frameworks.
For production use, we recommend you install a full-featured mock
object framework.
The NUnit project now uses NSubstitute and NUnit.Mocks is no longer
being developed.
Source: NUnit.Mocks 2.6.2

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Three20 framework replacement [closed]

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It was awhile since three20 was updated and their ipad support is a little buggy. i'm considering switching to a different framework or use the standard UIKit again. Their lead developer from facebook had started writing his own framework (https://github.com/jverkoey/nimbus) and it will probably take him awhile to copy everything.
I'm looking for a similar iOS framework to work with. Any suggestions? I really like the TTNavigator URLs logic and the TTTable data sources instead of the UITableViewDelegate.
Nimbus is an iOS framework whose feature set grows only as fast as its documentation. By focusing on documentation first and features second, Nimbus hopes to be a framework that accelerates the development process of any application by being easy to use and simple to understand.
http://jverkoey.github.com/nimbus/index.html
How about learning the native frameworks?

Summary/reference documentation on Scala standard library types [closed]

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Details on the packages/types is in the Scala API documentation on scala-lang.org. But that's organised by class and I (as a Scala neophyte) find it difficult to locate the exact data type I need and work out what operation are supported on what (especially in the huge and powerful scala.collections.* tree).
Is there an online or dead-tree resource that either presents this reference information more usably, or guides the reader through the library?
Alternatively, maybe I just need to be informed how to use the existing Scala API doc website more effectively.
Any advice on effective use of the standard Scala library gratefully received!
For the collections in particular, there's a very good overview available here: http://www.scala-lang.org/docu/files/collections-api/collections.html
Written by Martin Odersky himself :)

clojure.lang, etc. api [closed]

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Are the JavaDocs for clojure.lang, etc. available online? Do I need to build it myself from the Clojure source?
Thanks.
if you want descriptions for functions and even examples, visit ClojureDocs
you can even contribute ;)
Javadocs don't exist, per se. If you look at the Java source code, it's very sparsely documented. Certainly you could generate a skeleton yourself, but it probably wouldn't be all that useful anyway as much of the language is self-implemented (in clojure), using Java mostly for bootstrapping the core functionality. I don't think clojure.lang package is really intended to be used directly.
To learn about Clojure functions you can:
Use (doc) and (find-doc) from a repl
Use the API reference at clojure.org
See ClojureDocs, per #Belun's answer

Is there any free cross platform setup builder tool available? [closed]

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There are commercial cross-platform install tools out there and i think that they are really useful because you "compose" your setup once and the setup tool compiles it for the target platforms you want it to work for.
Unfortunately, such tools are expensive for a shareware author like me - they cost thousands of dollars. Are there similar open source projects out there?
Thanks in advance,
David
I'm having the same problem. Looked into IZPack, IZPack with Native Laucher, Lauch4J, ... All of them way too complex to use, at least for my taste. Searching for more info on IZPack, I've run accross that one a minute ago almost by accident: http://www.installjammer.com/
Looks promising, haven't tried it yet, though.
IZPack does very fine, i think. It's comprehensive, cross-platform and has a commercial-friendly license.

How to build a programmer's wiki [closed]

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For years I've missed a wiki so everyone could describe the new tools programmed, the servers where they are running, svn information, the internal rules of programming, how-tos, code samples, etc.
The wiki might be used for the dozen of programmers in the company and the externals.
I've been using a pmwiki (easy install) and now I want a better approach.
What wiki do you use? What plug-ins? Do you think there are better systems than wiki for this?
We're using TWiki for internal dev stuff, and I don't particularly like it. I'd rather use MediaWiki, as that's what Wikipedia uses, and more people are familiar with it.
We've been using a TWiki for several years, but it is being retired and replaced by TRAC.
Wen we started using TWiki I had great hopes, but the requirement for a special markup (like here on SO) never caught on with the management and admin types.
TRAC, as a wiki, is no better in that regard, but it suported by our IT guys and brings more tools for the development process.