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This change allows guard plugins (like guard-rspec) to pass options (like :priority) up to the Growl notifier. With this change, things like indirect/rspec-guard@d2f01d69a7 are possible, and the growl notification colors can be customized depending on the outcome of the spec run.
Conflicts:
lib/guard/notifier.rb
I basically went through all specs and applied the following rules:
* Use `describe` for methods and `context` for contexts.
* All class methods starts with `.` and instance methods with `#`.
* Removed all `it should`, because the specs _have to_.
* Applied a consistant naming on all listener specs.
* Make fixture usage more fail save by giving generous sleep times.
* Make all behaviour description non-technical and easy to understand.
The goal of this excercise was to have a documentation that is easy
readable and describes the behaviour and not the implementation.
Try it out by using the RSpec documentation format!