Ruby Weekly is a weekly newsletter covering the latest Ruby and Rails news. Breaking news! At JRubyConf 2012 (a 3 day JRuby-focused conference in Minneapolis) it has just been announced that JRuby core team members Thomas Enebo and Charles Nutter are moving from Engine Yard to open source giants Red Hat. The news was confirmed by Nutter in a tweet: Engine Yard shares their side of the story and sa
Ruby Weekly is a weekly newsletter covering the latest Ruby and Rails news. RSpec 2.8 has been released, along with rspec-rails 2.8.1 for the full Rails 3.x integration experience. RSpec is a BDD-focused testing tool that's particularly popular in the Rails world where everyone except DHH is using it (if you believe the hoopla). RSpec has faced accusations of being less than speedy in the past, bu
Ruby Weekly is a weekly newsletter covering the latest Ruby and Rails news. The Ruby standard library (a.k.a. stdlib) is a collection of Ruby libraries that, at one time or another, have been considered useful enough to include with the MRI Ruby implementation by standard. Due to the popularity of these libraries, other Ruby implementations have then tended to re-implement or include the standard
Ruby Weekly is a weekly newsletter covering the latest Ruby and Rails news. Despite RSpec's awesomeness, Test::Unit remains the most popular Ruby testing tool out there outside of Rails apps. I've recently been code walking through a lot of Ruby libraries for my Ruby Reloaded course and the typical arrangement is Test::Unit, sometimes coupled with Shoulda or Contest for some extra syntactic sweetn
Ruby Weekly is a weekly newsletter covering the latest Ruby and Rails news. In Rubyists Already Use Monadic Patterns, Dave Fayram made a passing reference to using ||= to set a variable's value if its value were 'Nothing' (false or nil in Ruby). The resulting Reddit quickly picked up on his definition (which was fixed later) and argued about ||='s true meaning which isn't as obvious as many Rubyis
Ruby Weekly is a weekly newsletter covering the latest Ruby and Rails news. On August 1, 2011, Ruby 1.9.3 preview 1 was released. The final version isn't yet out (as of September 23) but Ruby 1.9.3 is going to be the next, full production-level release of MRI Ruby. But what's the deal with 1.9.3 (and its successors, Ruby 1.9.4 and 2.0)? Keep reading! The Summary Ruby 1.9.3 is a relatively minor im
Ruby Weekly is a weekly newsletter covering the latest Ruby and Rails news. Ruby on Rails' creator David Heinemeier Hansson is currently at RailsConf 2011 along with hundreds of other Ruby and Rails developers. In a first for RailsConf, there's a live stream of some of the event which is was embedded below so you could watch DHH's keynote. DHH's keynote starts started at around 9.15am Eastern on M
Ruby Weekly is a weekly newsletter covering the latest Ruby and Rails news. Guess what? Yep, the forthcoming Rails 3.1 is going to be bringing in a few new friends as dependencies: CoffeeScript, jQuery, and Sass. What does this mean? Why has this been controversial? I'm going to quickly run through the details here. jQuery - A Non-Controversial Switch It was back in March (2011) when David Heineme
Ruby Weekly is a weekly newsletter covering the latest Ruby and Rails news. Maybe I'm weird (actually, there's no maybe about it) but when I first heard about Rails 3.1 getting CoffeeScript and Sass out of the box, I wanted to see how it worked and how smooth the process would be. So like quite a few people on IRC I've seen, I installed edge Rails (currently 3.1.0-beta) and got playing. (Yes, it's
Ruby Weekly is a weekly newsletter covering the latest Ruby and Rails news. Ryan Davis has announced the release of RubyGems 1.5.0. It comes just a month after the release of 1.4 which, notoriously, didn't work with Ruby 1.9.2. These problems have now all been ironed out and Ruby 1.8 and 1.9 users alike can safely upgrade (fingers crossed). RubyGems is the popular (and official - as of Ruby 1.9) R
Ruby Weekly is a weekly newsletter covering the latest Ruby and Rails news. The Rails 3 Way is the much awaited, Rails 3-focused followup to The Rails Way, a popular Rails book (and, dare I say, bible) by Obie Fernandez. It features forewords by David Heinemeier Hansson and Yehuda Katz and checks in at a desk-thumping 759 pages of full-on Rails 3 goodness (despite the book sites claiming 850 pages
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