The Little Book of Ruby

The Little Book of Ruby

A straightforward, step-by-step introduction to programming in Ruby with small, self-contained sample programs.

Tag(s): Ruby

Publication date: 01 Jun 2006

ISBN-10: n/a

ISBN-13: n/a

Paperback: 87 pages

Views: 22,182

Type: N/A

Publisher: Dark Neon Ltd.

License: n/a

Post time: 28 May 2007 10:46:10

The Little Book of Ruby

The Little Book of Ruby A straightforward, step-by-step introduction to programming in Ruby with small, self-contained sample programs.
Tag(s): Ruby
Publication date: 01 Jun 2006
ISBN-10: n/a
ISBN-13: n/a
Paperback: 87 pages
Views: 22,182
Document Type: N/A
Publisher: Dark Neon Ltd.
License: n/a
Post time: 28 May 2007 10:46:10
Terms and Conditions:
Huw Collingbourne wrote:You may freely copy and distribute this eBook as long as you do not modify the text or remove this copyright notice. You must not make any charge for this eBook.

Excerpts from the Introduction:

Ruby is a cross-platform interpreted language which has many features in common with other 'scripting' languages such as Perl and Python. However, its version of object orientation is more thorough than those languages and, in many respects, it has more in common with the great-granddaddy of 'pure' OOP languages, Smalltalk. The Ruby language was created by Yukihiro Matsumoto (commonly known as 'Matz') and it was first released in 1995.

What Is Rails?

Currently much of the excitement surrounding Ruby can be attributed to a web development framework called Rails – popularly known as 'Ruby On Rails'. While Rails is an impressive framework, it is not the be-all and end-all of Ruby. Indeed, if you decide to leap right into Rails development without first mastering Ruby, you may find that you end up with an application that you don't even understand. While the Little Book of Ruby won't cover the special features of Rails, it will give you the grounding you need to understand Rails code and write your own Rails applications.

How To Use This Book:

This book is a step-by-step tutorial to programming in Ruby and you can follow it chapter by chapter, reading the text and running the sample programs. On the other hand, if you prefer to 'dip in', you may want to try out some of the programs in whichever order takes your fancy; then refer back to the text for explanations. There are no monolithic applications in this book – just small, self-contained sample programs – so it’s easy to skip from chapter to chapter if you wish...
 




About The Author(s)


Huw Collingbourne is the technology director at SapphireSteel Software, developers of the “Sapphire” Ruby IDE for Visual Studio and the “Amethyst” IDE for the Adobe Flash Platform. He is author of The Book Of Ruby from No Starch Press. He runs Bitwise Courses and teaches courses on a range of programming topics.
 

Huw Collingbourne

Huw Collingbourne is the technology director at SapphireSteel Software, developers of the “Sapphire” Ruby IDE for Visual Studio and the “Amethyst” IDE for the Adobe Flash Platform. He is author of The Book Of Ruby from No Starch Press. He runs Bitwise Courses and teaches courses on a range of programming topics.
 


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