Ruby Best Practices

Practicing Ruby: A Newsletter by Gregory Brown

If you've been following the Ruby scene for a while you'll have heard of Gregory Brown. He's the author of O'Reilly's Ruby Best Practices, creator of the Prawn PDF library, and the head honcho of the Ruby Mendicant University.

#356 | “Ruby Best Practices eBook (free)” in Category: Learning/Help/Support

»Ruby Best Practices eBook (free)«

5 Chapters of O’Reilly’s Ruby Best Practices – Free!

rbp.pngRuby Best Practices is a book by Gregory Brown (and published by O'Reilly) that looks into the "Ruby way" of doing things in the Ruby language and, specifically, why Rubyists tend to write Ruby the way they do.

Book Promotion: Beginning Ruby 2nd Edition

Book Promotion: Beginning Ruby 2nd Edition

RubyLearning is pleased to announce the promotion of the book “Beginning Ruby 2nd Edition” by author Peter Cooper.

Beginning Ruby 2nd Edition

Code Blocks: Ruby's Swiss Army Knife

The following blog post is a direct excerpt from the Ruby Best Practices book. If you’ve been enjoying this blog, you’d probably love the book, so I’ve decided to release some content here to give you a sense of what to expect. Enjoy!

Interview: Author Gregory Brown

Our Book Promotion: “Ruby Best Practices” starts soon. Win one of four books to be given out for active participation. The coolest thing? Author Gregory Brown will be on site to answer questions! Click here for more details. Here, in this brief interview, Satish Talim of RubyLearning talks to Gregory Brown.

Gregory Brown

Book Promotion: Ruby Best Practices

Book Promotion: Ruby Best Practices

RubyLearning is pleased to announce the promotion of the book “Ruby Best Practices” by author Gregory Brown.

Ruby Best Practices

5 Ruby-related blogs for June

Over the years, I’ve collected a fair number of Ruby blogs in my feed reader. I thought I’d start sharing them for the benefit of others (in no particular order). Here’s the first installment – I’ll list some more at a later date.

Ruby Best Practices: The Best New Ruby Blog (This Year)

rbp.pngIt's pretty rare I recommend new blogs to follow on Ruby Inside. Not because I don't like them - I link to their posts all the time! - but because it's hard to tell if a new blog is going to keep going and be worth your while.

Fun with Class.new

Update: I came across an inlink to this page that was layering in advertisements in a frame. Luckily, there are technical solutions to at least some social problems, and you may now browse again in peace :)

If you’ve worked with Ruby for at least a little while, you might already know that classes in Ruby are objects themselves, in particular, instances of Class. Before I get into the fun stuff, let’s quickly recap what that means.

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