I’ve started learning Ruby and I’m still learning the basics.
My goal is to create web applications using rails and multiple API’s
(API
mashup… Google, FB, Twitter,etc…)
I see most people coding in Java script when communicating with API’s
and I
have 2 questions.
Is learning java script the only option to communicate with API’s?
If yes, do I need to learn entire java script? or just learning small
basic portion will still do the work?
I have no “real coding experience” but have pretty good understanding
about
how the web works under the hood.
Thanks in advance
On Tuesday, December 29, 2015 at 1:38:14 PM UTC, Nojin P. wrote:
Is learning java script the only option to communicate with API’s?
If yes, do I need to learn entire java script? or just learning small
basic portion will still do the work?
I have no “real coding experience” but have pretty good understanding
about how the web works under the hood.
Thanks in advance
It depends: if these are server side apis (i.e. called from your rails
app) then no, if they are client side ones (the api call is made by the
user’s browser) then yes. It’s not really possible to escape javascript
if
you’re developing for the web (setting to one side languages that are
transpiled to javascript). As always there is a distinction between a
language and the frameworks, libraries and ecosystem built on top of it
Javascript itself is not that big or complicated and you do need to
understand pretty much all of it, but you don’t need to learn ember,
react,
etc. if you don’t want to.
I’ve started learning Ruby and I’m still learning the basics.
My goal is to create web applications using rails and multiple API’s (API
mashup… Google, FB, Twitter,etc…)
Welcome!
E
The answer to this is, to my mind, you code in the language of your
application. If you application is written in JS, you write in JS; as
your application is written using Rails, you write in Ruby.
What’s possibly confusing the issue is that many public APIs as you have
listed transmit responses in JSON, which is a JS object. However, every
language used to communicate with web services has the ability to
understand that, including Ruby.
In addition, Rails has a tonne of contributed gems to interface with the
popular web services.
That said, you’ll still probably need to learn some JS along the way
anyway because it’s pretty much expected your own application front end
will need to use some.
Take it slow, learn in stages; there’s a lot to learn and you should
expect it to take some time.