Rolling With Ruby On Rails
Bart Braem writes "The Ruby community is abuzz about Rails, a web application framework that makes database-backed apps dead simple. What's the fuss? Is it worth the hype? Curt Hibbs shows off Rails at ONLamp, building a simple application that even non-Rubyists can follow."
And did a quick application with Ruby on Rails already. If you are confortable with Perl, you may find this easier to deal with then Python and it's love of whitespace. The object model is much more developed then either python or perl, but it still retains much of the flexability of the other two systems.
.NET. Since the core technology behind RoR is open classes, and the ability to add accessors and functionality on the fly, the other languages just don't cut it.
Ruby has already inspired a few efforts to duplicate the technology in Java and in
The usual warnings apply. Implicit code is easier 90% of the time, but that other 10% is painful to debug. With large projects you can prototype fast, but maintaining may be much more difficult.
A categorized collection of ruby links can be found here in a nicer format:
o k - ruby cookbook
http://www.rubygarden.org/ruby?RubyOnTheNet
Interactive ruby resources:
irc://irc.freenode.net/ruby-lang - the #ruby-lang channel is popular. More info at RubyOnIRC
http://www.ruby-forum.org/bb/ - a forum for ruby novices to ask questions
news://comp.lang.ruby - the ruby newsgroup
Ruby websites:
http://www.ruby-lang.org/ - ruby home
http://www.ruby-doc.org/ - ruby docs and online reference
http://www.rubyforge.org/ - rubyforge ruby projects
http://raa.ruby-lang.org/ - ruby application archive
Ruby Code Examples and Snippets:
http://pleac.sourceforge.net/pleac_ruby/ - ruby pleac
http://www.rubygarden.org/ruby?RubyOnlineCookbo
Popular ruby and ruby-related projects:
http://rubyinstaller.rubyforge.org/wiki/wiki.pl - ruby installer for Windows
http://rubyforge.org/projects/rubygems/ - rubygems ruby package manager
http://www.yaml.org/ - ruby 1.8 includes built-in yaml support
http://www.rubyonrails.com/ - web framework in ruby
http://rubyforge.org/projects/instiki/ - wiki in ruby
I given it a testdrive, and RubyOnRails is an amazingly fast and powerful way to develop webapps, but even so, it's been around for a while and still 99% of webhosts only stick to tomcat & PHP/MySQL, so that's what I code for. Even Python w/o Rails has more ISP support.
My question is: When will RubyOnRails get "popular enough" to make inroads? I'm looking forward to it, because it means I can be way more productive and get a head start on all the other PHP "solution providers" out there.
I like Ruby, even before I got to know Rails. The only thing I regret is that LAMR sounds really bad.
;).
I develop webpages with LAMR - imagine saying something like that
You might want to tell that to Basecamp, 43 Things, and Tada Lists, since they obviously have no idea that Rails isn't good for anything of that magnitude. Might also mention it to all the thousands of people that use those sites, daily, and to the handful of developers who built and deployed those sites in a fraction of the time and cost of other web solutions.
Then again, maybe you shouldn't...
Rails is an incredibly good framework for Ruby, that really shows off its power and makes it easy to get a web application going, but it's not all that Ruby has to offer.
Ruby is full of incredible libraries and frameworks like this, especially where text processing and web development are concerned. It's because Ruby has such a rich set of features.
Anyone who likes Rails should dig deeper. Heck, Ruby's standard library comes with some amazing things. Ruby also has a framework called RubyGems,
which is very much like Perl's CPAN integration or CommonLisp's ASDF framework.
Slashdot. It's Not For Common Sense
It's extremely cool to watch someone set up a working webapp that fast.
But I have to take issue with:
Half of the darn article is setting up MySql and installing Ruby and Rails from scratch on a windows machine. Do you have any idea how much harder this crap is to write in other frameworks? You'd have to write at least 2x as much code. No one has an Active Record class as good as Rails'. You'd double the code count just doing the SQL linkage!It's one thing to be unimpressed, but it's another to know jack shit about the domain and say it's all worthless. Anyone who's ever made a web application will appreciate it.
Slashdot. It's Not For Common Sense
Perhaps the documentation for ActiveRecord will help answer your question?
http://ar.rubyonrails.org/
You can automatically retrieve data from the database in the form of an object, do manipulations or calculations, display it, modify it, then do a save() method on the object and it'll go right back into the database.
FlexGrid? FLEXGRID?!?!
Implementation of FlexGrids is responsible for extreme stress, male pattern baldness, genital warts, dry heaves, infertility, webbed toes, seeing spots, loss of super powers, carpal tunnel syndrome, diarrhea, dandruff, dispepsia, gas, fingernail rot, yellowy wax buildup, stink foot, Plantars warts, incontinence, communism, crusty boogers, arthritis, bursitis and and cooties. The only treatment is 500mg of Dammitol, fiftytwo times a day.
You, sir, are a maniac.
A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
I've almost finished developing a real estate site using it. First time using Rails.
In PHP or other related language, probably would've taken me about 80 hours or so to develop the site. In Rails, I've spent maybe 15 hours or so total on it. And I'm charging $8k for the site. Admittedly, that doesn't include time working on the graphics or design of the site, just the backend, search, etc.
So if you look at it from one perspective, I went from making $100 an hour to $533 an hour using Rails!
Firstly, Rails's ActiveRecord class is very simple Ruby code, so it's naturally bug-resistant.
Secondly, the author knows that ActiveRecord could be a source of problems, which is why it's got dozens of unit tests, covering nearly every line of code.
Thirdly, even with all that bugs can and will sneak through, which is why ActiveRecord can, upon command, write a detailed log of its attempt to dynamically bind and create the classes you want. The logging is at the message-passing level of Ruby, which is nearly as atomic as you can get (you could hack the interpreter to go further, but that'd be pointless).
The dark ages of hideous bugs in dynamic code are gone my friend. We have the tools and techniques to make code of this type both safe and maintainable. Don't be afraid of it.
Slashdot. It's Not For Common Sense
Perl has its own rapid application development framework, Maypole. Here are some screenshots from a Perl.com article where Simon Cozens sets up an online sales catalog in 11 lines of code. (Here's a followup article, and the Maypole home page.)
These systems all demo well because the developer gets to decide what functionality to demo, and it not coincidentally happens to be the functionality the framework was designed to easily support. The real test of the system comes when you want to do something the designer did not anticipate, and you find out how flexible the system is and how sensible the designer's instincts are.
With these environments I think time will tell, with most developers watching the few willing to take the risk of investing the time needed to learn the framework and how to customize it extensively.
i've tried rails a little bit, and jsp before that, and wasn't particularly impressed with either. is there a reason all web frameworks require a weird directory structure? rails seems better then jsp because it doesn't require an arcane descriptor file, but it still requires you to use a funky directory structure, which means the structure of your application doesn't seem to correspond in any meaningful way with your web site structure.
why can't someone build a decent framework that follows the simple "directories are directories and files are pages" model used by asp, php, cgi, etc.
and what's with the database naming conventions? the author kind of brushes it off at the end with this statement: "Even if you have to use a legacy database that does not use the Rails naming conventions, you don't have to give up the productivity advantages of using Rails--there is still a way to tell Rails explicitly what table and column names to use." personally I would not use those conventions no matter what database i was using, nor would any decent database developer or administrator i have ever known.
at any rate, at work i program in whatever language they tell me- currently asp+jscript, before that php. for personal projects, my current favorite is perl's HTML::Mason. all the benefits of php (and then some) without the awful language conventions.
If I don't put anything here, will anyone recognize me anymore?