At first glance, Elixir might look like Ruby, but it’s not Ruby, anyone who has worked in both languages for any amount of time should back that up. But just because it’s not Ruby, doesn’t mean that Rubyists should be turned off by Elixir, and all that it has to offer, including the Phoenix Framework. When you install Elixir, you also get a tool called “mix” which basically handles and performs th
Rails 5.0 is approaching, bringing with it niceties for websockets, backend-only API servers, and revamping the command layer. Version 4.0 brought turbolinks, russian-doll caching, the queue API, and a host of improvements. All of these, except maybe turbolinks, were great new features but did not fundamentally alter the way applications are built in Rails. That’s good news! It means Rails is a ma
I’ve been keen on Elixir for a while now. For us at Made by Many the promise of the productivity of Ruby without compromising on raw performance and scalability is rapidly making it a prime candidate for our go-to server-side language of choice. To overcome the Elixir learning curve I’ve done a few things including reading and working the exercises in the excellent Dave Thomas book and attending E
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