Ruby On Rails, Design, Simplicity, Web 2.0, Ajax, Mac and Tons of Pizza.

Feb 29

Ruby Pocket Sessions

Posted by Massimo Sgrelli in Ruby on Rails - 2 comments digg this add to delicious

I have been a full time software developer for many years and I love to keep myself up to date with programming languages and technology in general. Of course in the last two years Ruby and Ruby on Rails have been my main interests. My time is often spread over a thousand activities at the same time, and I love that. But as soon as I have spare time, I like dedicating some hours to coding. I’m not actually a Ruby expert like the well known star DHH or Jamis Buck or Peter Cooper, but I am for sure a Ruby and Ruby on Rails enthusiast and a true believer.

If you aren’t a full time developer all the time when you start coding you need a quick refresh of the basics. That’s why Ruby Pocket Reference is so precious to me and I thought of sharing this refreshing sessions with all you Ruby new comers, I just highlighted on this blog small Ruby characteristics that I found while reading this guide or browsing the Net. Nothing complicated, only a small quick review moment.

So keep in touch and looking forward to my Ruby Pocket Sessions.

Comments

  • Phill Kenoyer

    Posted on March 02

    I personally like Ruby Brain and Rails Brain. They can be downloaded and used local too. Best reference I've ever used.
  • Massimo Sgrelli

    Posted on March 03

    They're are great if you need an API reference. I use them too. But you know sometimes I you more useful reading a good book and a pocket reference is the ideal choice for me: in 2 or 3 hours I can have a full overview or a precious refresh.

Post a comment

Categories:

Tags:

Powered by Mephisto, Valid XHTML 1.1, Valid CSS - Supported by Wave Factory