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Dress to Impress, a big fancy Neopets customization tool!
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Matchu 2df0133cff Oops, using item proxies broke closet comparison. Fix.
Turns out we need to assign closeted to actual items, not
the item proxies, since that's what we check against. (I
would've thought they're backed by the same instance of
the item anyway, but, whatever. The fix works :P)
2014-02-04 16:29:59 -06:00
.sass-cache phew. rails 3.2.12, including some asset pipeline. still buggy. 2013-03-05 20:08:57 -06:00
app Oops, using item proxies broke closet comparison. Fix. 2014-02-04 16:29:59 -06:00
autotest rspec:install 2010-05-14 18:17:10 -04:00
config ugh, add react.js manually :( 2014-01-20 14:35:28 -06:00
db closet hangers index uses neopets connections dropdown 2014-01-18 22:50:14 -06:00
doc rails 3 2010-05-14 18:12:31 -04:00
lib add pet state replacement task 2013-11-30 20:33:48 -05:00
public monocle favicon 2013-12-26 12:44:03 -05:00
script rails 3 2010-05-14 18:12:31 -04:00
spec report broken images 2011-08-07 18:23:44 -04:00
test core of pet loading, still needs get image hash, download assets 2010-10-07 10:46:23 -04:00
tmp utf-8 support in both ruby 1.9 and 1.8 2011-06-04 18:40:15 -04:00
vendor basic modeling buttons 2014-01-10 16:25:03 -05:00
.gitignore ignore cap files, move auth config to yaml file 2010-11-13 10:37:57 -05:00
bundle rails 3.1 upgrade - still buggy 2013-03-05 15:10:25 -06:00
config.ru move async behavior to development_async environment 2010-10-11 18:28:39 -04:00
Gemfile basic modeling buttons 2014-01-10 16:25:03 -05:00
Gemfile.lock basic modeling buttons 2014-01-10 16:25:03 -05:00
isntall rails 3.1 upgrade - still buggy 2013-03-05 15:10:25 -06:00
LICENSE copy LICENSE from impress repo 2010-07-07 02:34:17 -04:00
Rakefile update Rakefile and tasks to match new version of rake 2013-01-02 23:40:37 -05:00
README replace standard rails readme :P 2010-07-07 02:31:47 -04:00

An extension of Dress to Impress (PHP) that runs on Ruby on Rails.
I wanted to use Rails initially for Impress, but hoped that using
PHP would allow me to attract more developers. Looks like that
wasn't the case, so I just went with what I loved and made the
items database in Rails.

Future Impress sections will likely find themselves in this
project, rather than the PHP project.