I agree also. It seems that there are also overlapping issues that go
together with Rails programming. I would like to be able to be great at
Ruby programming too. I picked up a book on Scripting Intelligence and
while the author speaks of doing things in Rails, there is so much Ruby
programming in the text.
On wikipedia Drupal is in the same classification as Ruby, as a
framework. Not sure if it fits but I find myself getting ignored in my
requests there. I have to admit that I dont have that experience here.
I do seem to get responses to my questions even when I annoy others
with my naivet.
This could be a topic in itself but anyway, I bought that book the Rails
Tutorial. It struck me as somewhat overwhelming the programming in
Rails can be. For example, in section 1.2 of the tutorial, the author
writes, (Also beware that lots of things can go wrong. For example, on
my system the latest version of Ruby 1.8.7 wont compile; instead after
much searching and hand-wringing, I discovered that I needed patchlevel
number 174:
$ rvm install 1.8.7-p174
When things like this happen to you, its always frustrating, but at
least you know that it happens to everyone…)
Ok, the problem is that the author didnt say how he determined what
patchlevel he needed… So, I had mixed feelings… on the one hand
there is the consolation in knowing that the difficulty one is having
just getting started is not a unique experience for you coming to RoR.
On the other hand, this is extremely daunting for a newbie to Rails.
With other languages, usually backwards compatibility is maintained for
a certain period of time. For example, you can run PHP 4.x.y on a
system with PHP 5.3.x but not necessarily the other way around. As a
matter of fact, Im not aware of any other language Ive used that had
anywhere near the level of potential things that could go wrong.
I dont mean to discredit RoR but to see how one can get a handle on this
issue. I wonder why one would need such a specific version of Ruby?
In my case it was only Rails that created any kind of problem. Ruby was
easy enough to get up and running.
Bruce
From: Ashokkumar Yuvarajan
Sent: Wednesday, September 5, 2012 6:43 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Rails] I wanna make a new rails community
I agree…
Am Ashokkumar, RoR developer.
I started rails programming for my past 4months.
I think we both are the right pair to start learning.
All is well !!
On Tue, Sep 4, 2012 at 7:03 AM, Tima [email protected] wrote:
Hi everyone! I’m a newbie engineer.
I started rails programming, but I’m learning alone and can’t
understand other rails cord so much.
So I wanna have friend with other newbie rails engineers and share a
process of making apps.
It is not for sharing the “result” of programming like Github, but for
recording the almost all of process of making one app.
It’ll not be so profitable for expert rails player, but good for
beginners who haven’t make so much apps.
If some of you agree with this theme, please post on this board.
regards
Tima
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“Attitude is a little thing that makes a big difference”
Thanks & Regards
Ashokkumar.Y
ROR-Developer
email : [email protected]
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