Detail [JA] Building the Ruby interpreter -- What is easy and what is difficult? Ten years ago, I started developing YARV: Yet Another RubyVM to make the Ruby interpreter faster. Today, a decade later, I continue work toward improving quality (includes performance) of the Ruby interpreter in my job. In this presentation, I will show you I will show you what is easy, and what is difficult to improv
Kaja(冠者) is Japanese traditional word. Kaja means hopeful youngster. We use the word as newcomer hopeful rubyist. RubyKaja is Award of Rubyist for "shy" Japanese Rubyist. For the purpose of making a chance to praise each other, We have regional Rubyist communities elect active but "not famous" Rubyist, and We all honor them. In this talk, We announce and honor the Rubyists as RubyKaja 2013 and, in
SPEAKER: Kakutani Shintaro ABSTRACT: DCI (Data, Context and Interaction) is a "paradigm" in object-oriented application design. DCI is getting popular with object-oriented proponent Rubyists these days. In this talk, we'll discuss: Why object-oriented proponent Rubyists mention DCI? What DCI is, and how DCI is complementary to the MVC framework of Ruby on Rails. (So far) how to avoid 'Too fat t
SPEAKER: Tatsuhiko Miyagawa ABSTRACT: Ruby is known to have been inspired by many programming languages, especially Lisp and Perl. Most notably Perl's principle "TIMTOWTDI" motto was imported to Ruby as the "Diversity matters" concept. Similarly, some concepts in successful Ruby projects such as Rails (CoC, full-stack MVC framework) and Sinatra (dead-simple DSL to write web applications) have in
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