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Lets not be too shy about just using `extend` instead of `include` here when it's more appropriate to do so. The advantage to this approach is that the module can be either extended _or_ included with this change, but couldn't be without it due to the `ClassMethods` meta-magic. List has already started doing this as of #314, so we don't have to be afraid of breaking convention here.
= Stripe Ruby bindings {<img src="https://travis-ci.org/stripe/stripe-ruby.svg?branch=master" alt="Build Status" />}[https://travis-ci.org/stripe/stripe-ruby] == Documentation {Ruby API Docs}[https://stripe.com/docs/api/ruby#intro] == Installation You don't need this source code unless you want to modify the gem. If you just want to use the Stripe Ruby bindings, you should run: gem install stripe If you want to build the gem from source: gem build stripe.gemspec == Requirements * Ruby 1.8.7 or above. (Ruby 1.8.6 may work if you load ActiveSupport.) For Ruby versions before 1.9.2, you'll need to add this to your Gemfile: if Gem::Version.new(RUBY_VERSION) < Gem::Version.new('1.9.2') gem 'rest-client', '~> 1.6.8' end * rest-client, json == Bundler If you are installing via bundler, you should be sure to use the https rubygems source in your Gemfile, as any gems fetched over http could potentially be compromised in transit and alter the code of gems fetched securely over https: source 'https://rubygems.org' gem 'rails' gem 'stripe' == Development Run all tests: bundle exec rake Run a single test suite: bundle exec ruby -Ilib/ test/stripe/util_test.rb Run a single test: bundle exec ruby -Ilib/ test/stripe/util_test.rb -n /should.convert.names.to.symbols/
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