What would you guys consider to be some of the biggest barriers facing a C# programmer wanting to get serious about Rails development. Sorry for the general non-specifics - just curious about some feedback
For a bit of "thus-far". I've set up a Ubuntu box at home and I have MySQL, Git, Ruby, Rails, and the Ruby Package/Version Manager installed. I figured it would be beneficial to develop on a new OS as well - what I don't have is a Web Server picked out yet and I haven't picked an IDE or deployment method. Am I stretching myself too far away from Windows? can Rails be worked with easily on a Windows box?
It is fundamentally easier to go from C# to Ruby, than the other way around. That said, the biggest challenge C# developers will face is the culture shock. There is a whole ecosystem of tools that are typical of the Rails development world which are pretty much unknown to most C# developers. When you approach Rails for the first time, you are almost expected to be competent with *nix operating systems, the command line, and an editor rather than a powerful IDE like Visual Studio.
if you need to dig deeper when it comes to Ruby itself, I recommend either the 2nd edition of Peter Cooper's book, or "The Ruby Programming Language" by O'Reilly. The first uses a tutorial style. The second is an excellent, lawyer-like reference. Depending on your learning style, you may like one or the other.
I think both are necessary to have actually. The problem + solution guides are great for getting started, the reference is for more complex digging - thats how I use C# books anyway
the Cookbooks and reference guides, separate purposes for sure
Oh, and at this stage, don't worry too much about Ruby 1.8 vs Ruby 1.9. Use whatever the tutorial you are reading uses; the differences among the two can be learned very quickly.
I just wrote a blog entry about learning Ruby on Rails online (ror.kateray.net). Does anyone have any other good suggestions, besides books, for learning?
Jeff, the reason why I suggest Mongrel for development is that it's extremely easy to setup. You simply add gem 'mongrel' to your Gemfile, and then install it and you are done. rails server will pick it up for you. For deployment tough, where you want performances, nginx and Passenger are hard to beat.
daniel: I've never used Hostgator, but I switched off Heroku to Slicehost a few monts ago for the same reason (too expensive). If you're willing to learn some sysadmin stuff, Slicehost is great.
So Antonio, that tutorial is done using Heroku, I'd be fine running that and should I look into Mongrel/Thin afterwards as well? try different servers?
Jeff, Heroku is perfectly fine. Learning to do it without Heroku is not hard, so I wouldn't worry about it for now.
daniel, Hostgator is OK if you can't afford any better, but don't expect fantastic performances or 100% uptime. Webbynode and Linode are better alternatives. Webbynode guides you more than Linode, where you are a bit on your own.
Sounds good - the tutorial seems to go from code to Heroku though - How is it that he's suggesting we test before we deploy to Heroku - is there a default Rails server that will host your app locally in the same way Visual Studio hosts your app when debugging?
by default I mean, built in - or am I misreading a step where we use something like Mongrel/Thin in this tut
I'm sure I'd actually find the answer to this as I'm going through the tutorial in detail, haha - I just thought I'd ask
@JoePym Editors are perfectly fine. TextMate on Mac OS X is really great. However, for someone coming from Visual Studio like @JeffDalley does, an IDE like RubyMine or AptanaStudio will definitely make things easier
@JeffDalley Mongrel or Thin doesn't really matter. Thin is event based and can perform slightly better. But it will perform worse if there are blocking calls. For development purposes, install one or the other, it won't make a difference.
@AntonioCangiano Indeed, and it's not like it matters much in development anyway. You should fire it up pretty rarely too, since you should be writing tests.
Hm, lets see if this is gonna work. SO Chat, I suppose it is good for questions which do not deserve a real question on SO :). Like the small ones you truly want to be answered but are not big enough for a real SO question :).
It might help with certain classes of problems, having people help each other walk through what's going on. It may be better than asking questions in comments and waiting for the asker to edit their question with more info.
True. So, lets kick it. Anyone here ever worked with the youtube api (especially the uploading part) and can give an argument for either using a gem (youtube-g / Quark .. etc) or start clean? Can't really find good overviews off the available gems so wondering which way to go. Want to do some browser-uploading via my site if possible.
noob question: I have a form that a user fills in, and then sends it to my post route. I then inspect the parameters and if everything is alright I render a preview html page, if not, I redirect back. The problem is, that if I redirect back, the form get cleared empty, and I dont want that to happen. Anything to prevent it?
@zyash redirect :back (if that is what you're using) will redirect to the HTTP-REFERER, but the values you want are in the params for your current request
@zyash a more common pattern here would be to render rather than redirect, particularly if it's an action in the same controller