Would you mind scrolling up to my original comment where I posted the exact 5 lines?
My designers need to work with my Rails apps
Then you should have noticed that installing rails is the least of your worries. Database seeds, missing dependencies, test-users, broken fixtures, broken mocks, missing external APIs, version control conflicts, gem screw-ups, failing migrations, rails upgrades, differences to the production setup. Those are the daily timesinks over here in the real world.
The initial rails installation doesn't even register in the grand scheme of things.
I can't tell what you're actually arguing for or against in this thread. There seem to be two different things:
1) The rails.app project wants to solve a problem that doesn't exist. There are a lot of comments here from other people who think getting started with rails is confusing, and who point out that your much-touted five steps are not complete, canonical, or easy, so I won't further beat that dead horse.
2) There are many harder problems you'll come across when doing rails professionally. This is incredibly true, nobody disagrees, but it's irrelevant to the rails.app project.
Would you mind scrolling up to my original comment where I posted the exact 5 lines?
My designers need to work with my Rails apps
Then you should have noticed that installing rails is the least of your worries. Database seeds, missing dependencies, test-users, broken fixtures, broken mocks, missing external APIs, version control conflicts, gem screw-ups, failing migrations, rails upgrades, differences to the production setup. Those are the daily timesinks over here in the real world.
The initial rails installation doesn't even register in the grand scheme of things.