From ruby
Manages Ruby gems and Bundler: writes Gemfiles with version constraints and groups, runs bundle commands, creates gem structures and gemspecs, handles Gemfile.lock.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/ruby:ruby-gems-and-bundlerThis skill is limited to the following tools:
The summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
Master Ruby's package management system with gems and Bundler. Learn to manage dependencies, create gems, and publish to RubyGems.
Master Ruby's package management system with gems and Bundler. Learn to manage dependencies, create gems, and publish to RubyGems.
source 'https://rubygems.org'
# Ruby version
ruby '3.3.0'
# Production gems
gem 'rails', '~> 7.1'
gem 'pg', '>= 1.1'
gem 'puma', '~> 6.0'
# Development and test gems
group :development, :test do
gem 'rspec-rails'
gem 'factory_bot_rails'
gem 'faker'
end
# Development only
group :development do
gem 'rubocop'
gem 'rubocop-rails'
end
# Test only
group :test do
gem 'capybara'
gem 'selenium-webdriver'
end
# Git source
gem 'my_gem', git: 'https://github.com/user/my_gem.git'
# Local path (for development)
gem 'local_gem', path: '../local_gem'
# Specific branch
gem 'experimental_gem', git: 'https://github.com/user/repo.git', branch: 'develop'
# Require specific file or false to not auto-require
gem 'sidekiq', require: 'sidekiq/web'
gem 'bootsnap', require: false
# Exact version
gem 'rails', '7.1.0'
# Pessimistic operator (allows patch updates)
gem 'rails', '~> 7.1.0' # >= 7.1.0 and < 7.2.0
gem 'rails', '~> 7.1' # >= 7.1.0 and < 8.0.0
# Greater than or equal
gem 'pg', '>= 1.1'
# Range
gem 'ruby-version', '>= 1.0', '< 2.0'
# Multiple constraints
gem 'nokogiri', '>= 1.10', '< 2.0'
# Install all gems from Gemfile
bundle install
# Install to specific path
bundle install --path vendor/bundle
# Update all gems
bundle update
# Update specific gem
bundle update rails
# Check for outdated gems
bundle outdated
# Show gem location
bundle show rails
# Execute command with bundled gems
bundle exec rspec
# Open gem in editor
bundle open rails
# Check Gemfile syntax
bundle check
# Remove unused gems
bundle clean
# List all installed gems
bundle list
# Show dependency tree
bundle viz
The Gemfile.lock file locks gem versions for consistent installations:
# Always commit Gemfile.lock to version control
# This ensures all developers use same gem versions
# Regenerate Gemfile.lock
rm Gemfile.lock
bundle install
# Create new gem
bundle gem my_gem
# Structure:
my_gem/
├── lib/
│ ├── my_gem/
│ │ └── version.rb
│ └── my_gem.rb
├── spec/
│ ├── my_gem_spec.rb
│ └── spec_helper.rb
├── bin/
│ ├── console
│ └── setup
├── .gitignore
├── Gemfile
├── LICENSE.txt
├── my_gem.gemspec
├── Rakefile
└── README.md
# my_gem.gemspec
require_relative 'lib/my_gem/version'
Gem::Specification.new do |spec|
spec.name = "my_gem"
spec.version = MyGem::VERSION
spec.authors = ["Your Name"]
spec.email = ["[email protected]"]
spec.summary = "Short summary of gem"
spec.description = "Longer description of what gem does"
spec.homepage = "https://github.com/username/my_gem"
spec.license = "MIT"
spec.required_ruby_version = ">= 3.0.0"
spec.metadata["homepage_uri"] = spec.homepage
spec.metadata["source_code_uri"] = "https://github.com/username/my_gem"
spec.metadata["changelog_uri"] = "https://github.com/username/my_gem/CHANGELOG.md"
# Specify which files should be added to the gem
spec.files = Dir.chdir(File.expand_path(__dir__)) do
`git ls-files -z`.split("\x0").reject do |f|
f.match(%r{\A(?:test|spec|features)/})
end
end
spec.bindir = "exe"
spec.executables = spec.files.grep(%r{\Aexe/}) { |f| File.basename(f) }
spec.require_paths = ["lib"]
# Runtime dependencies
spec.add_dependency "activesupport", "~> 7.0"
spec.add_dependency "nokogiri", ">= 1.10"
# Development dependencies
spec.add_development_dependency "rspec", "~> 3.12"
spec.add_development_dependency "rubocop", "~> 1.50"
end
# lib/my_gem/version.rb
module MyGem
VERSION = "0.1.0"
end
# lib/my_gem.rb
require_relative "my_gem/version"
require_relative "my_gem/core"
require_relative "my_gem/helpers"
module MyGem
class Error < StandardError; end
def self.configure
yield configuration
end
def self.configuration
@configuration ||= Configuration.new
end
class Configuration
attr_accessor :api_key, :timeout
def initialize
@api_key = nil
@timeout = 30
end
end
end
# Build gem locally
gem build my_gem.gemspec
# This creates my_gem-0.1.0.gem
# Install locally for testing
gem install ./my_gem-0.1.0.gem
# Uninstall
gem uninstall my_gem
# First time setup (one-time)
gem push my_gem-0.1.0.gem
# You'll be prompted to log in
# For subsequent pushes
gem push my_gem-0.2.0.gem
# Yank a version (removes from RubyGems)
gem yank my_gem -v 0.1.0
# Unyank a version
gem unyank my_gem -v 0.1.0
# Semantic Versioning: MAJOR.MINOR.PATCH
# 1.0.0 -> 1.0.1 (patch)
# 1.0.1 -> 1.1.0 (minor)
# 1.1.0 -> 2.0.0 (major)
# lib/my_gem/version.rb
module MyGem
VERSION = "1.0.0"
end
# Update version, then build and push:
# 1. Edit version.rb
# 2. gem build my_gem.gemspec
# 3. gem push my_gem-1.0.0.gem
# List installed gems
gem list
# Search for gems
gem search rails
# Show gem info
gem info rails
# List gem dependencies
gem dependency rails
# Update all gems
gem update
# Update specific gem
gem update rails
# Cleanup old versions
gem cleanup
# Show gem environment
gem env
# Install specific version
gem install rails -v 7.1.0
# Install without documentation (faster)
gem install rails --no-document
# Uninstall gem
gem uninstall rails
# Fetch gem but don't install
gem fetch rails
# Define groups
group :development do
gem 'pry'
end
group :test do
gem 'rspec'
end
group :development, :test do
gem 'factory_bot'
end
# Install without specific groups
bundle install --without production
# Require specific groups
Bundler.require(:default, :development)
# Primary source
source 'https://rubygems.org'
# Additional sources
source 'https://gems.example.com' do
gem 'private_gem'
end
# Git sources
gem 'my_gem', git: 'https://github.com/user/my_gem.git'
gem 'my_gem', git: 'https://github.com/user/my_gem.git', tag: 'v1.0'
gem 'my_gem', git: 'https://github.com/user/my_gem.git', branch: 'main'
gem 'my_gem', git: 'https://github.com/user/my_gem.git', ref: 'abc123'
# GitHub shorthand
gem 'my_gem', github: 'user/my_gem'
# Local path
gem 'my_gem', path: '../my_gem'
# In code
require 'my_gem'
# Bundler auto-requires gems based on Gemfile
# To disable auto-require:
gem 'my_gem', require: false
# Then manually require where needed:
require 'my_gem'
# Require specific file
gem 'sidekiq', require: 'sidekiq/web'
# Only install on specific platforms
gem 'pg', platforms: :ruby
gem 'sqlite3', platforms: [:mingw, :mswin, :x64_mingw]
# Multiple platforms
platforms :ruby do
gem 'pg'
gem 'nokogiri'
end
platforms :jruby do
gem 'activerecord-jdbc-adapter'
end
# Gemfile
source 'https://rubygems.org'
source 'https://gems.mycompany.com' do
gem 'private_gem'
end
# .netrc file for private repos
machine github.com
login your-username
password your-token
bundle console# Open IRB with gem loaded
bin/console
# Or
bundle console
# Using Rake
rake spec
# Or directly
bundle exec rspec
# In your app's Gemfile, point to local gem
gem 'my_gem', path: '../my_gem'
# Or use bundle config
bundle config local.my_gem ../my_gem
❌ Don't commit vendor/bundle to git (use .gitignore)
❌ Don't use require: false unnecessarily - adds manual work
❌ Don't specify exact versions unless absolutely necessary
❌ Don't push untested gem versions to RubyGems
❌ Don't include unnecessary files in gem packages
❌ Don't hardcode credentials in gemspec or Gemfile
# Clear bundler cache
bundle clean --force
# Regenerate Gemfile.lock
rm Gemfile.lock && bundle install
# Check for gem conflicts
bundle exec gem dependency
# Verbose output
bundle install --verbose
# Show why a gem is needed
bundle show rails
# List all gem versions
bundle list
npx claudepluginhub thebushidocollective/han --plugin rubyWrites idiomatic Ruby code with metaprogramming, Rails patterns, and performance optimization. Specializes in Ruby on Rails, gem development, and testing with RSpec/Minitest.
Writes Ruby gems using Andrew Kane's patterns for simplicity, minimal dependencies, Rails integration, class macros, and configuration. For new gems, refactoring, or API design.
Write Ruby gems following Andrew Kane's patterns. Use when creating or refactoring gems, designing gem APIs, or building minimal production-ready Ruby libraries.