S
Stephen Kellett
I got the regular email from JavaLobby today. Don't read it much, but
the email title was "Ruby on Rails is a powerhouse". The text relating
to it was:
<quote>
Rick Ross, JavaLobby Founder Ruby on Rails is a powerhouse
I didn't get to spend much time at the No Fluff Just Stuff symposium
here in Research Triangle Park this past weekend, but one noteworthy
session I did get to attend was Dave Thomas' presentation about "Ruby on
Rails." I was amazed as I sat through the 90-minute presentation
watching Dave knock out feature after feature of a real-life web
application in record time and with more compact code than any I had
previously seen. The Rails developers seem to have carefully considered
the recurring pattern needs of web apps, and the framework provides full
functionality for a typical database-backed CRUD (create, read, update,
delete) application in a matter of minutes. Rails uses intelligent
reflection to map database tables to Ruby objects, and the apps you
generate with the Rails scripts form a very reasonable foundation for
extending and customizing to meet your specific needs. Unit testing is
built-in by default, as is a full web server for testing and debugging.
The next time you need to get the job done very quickly you may want to
try out Ruby on Rails for yourself. I don't know enough yet to say how
much it can scale, but Rails is quite clearly a major step forward for
those who want web application development to be easier. Dave has a new
book in beta, check it out here.
</quote>
Also if you go to
http://www.javalobby.org/articles/nfjs/
and then to the bottom of the page (Sunday – May 22, 2005), some nice
comments about Dave's presentations at No Fluff Just Stuff.
the email title was "Ruby on Rails is a powerhouse". The text relating
to it was:
<quote>
Rick Ross, JavaLobby Founder Ruby on Rails is a powerhouse
I didn't get to spend much time at the No Fluff Just Stuff symposium
here in Research Triangle Park this past weekend, but one noteworthy
session I did get to attend was Dave Thomas' presentation about "Ruby on
Rails." I was amazed as I sat through the 90-minute presentation
watching Dave knock out feature after feature of a real-life web
application in record time and with more compact code than any I had
previously seen. The Rails developers seem to have carefully considered
the recurring pattern needs of web apps, and the framework provides full
functionality for a typical database-backed CRUD (create, read, update,
delete) application in a matter of minutes. Rails uses intelligent
reflection to map database tables to Ruby objects, and the apps you
generate with the Rails scripts form a very reasonable foundation for
extending and customizing to meet your specific needs. Unit testing is
built-in by default, as is a full web server for testing and debugging.
The next time you need to get the job done very quickly you may want to
try out Ruby on Rails for yourself. I don't know enough yet to say how
much it can scale, but Rails is quite clearly a major step forward for
those who want web application development to be easier. Dave has a new
book in beta, check it out here.
</quote>
Also if you go to
http://www.javalobby.org/articles/nfjs/
and then to the bottom of the page (Sunday – May 22, 2005), some nice
comments about Dave's presentations at No Fluff Just Stuff.