AppSignal | sdoc | |
---|---|---|
8 | 21 | |
172 | 821 | |
1.2% | 0.1% | |
9.0 | 8.7 | |
6 days ago | 9 days ago | |
Ruby | JavaScript | |
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
AppSignal
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Stream Updates to Your Users with LiteCable for Ruby on Rails
Continuous monitoring of your app's WebSocket performance metrics using tools like AppSignal is your friend here. Reusing the ActionCable consumer on the client side is also advisable, as it will prevent wasting Pub/Sub connections.
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How to Use Sinatra to Build a Ruby Application
Once you've successfully deployed your Sinatra app, you can easily use Appsignal's Ruby APM service. AppSignal offers an integration for Rails and Rack-based apps like Sinatra.
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Integrate and Troubleshoot Inbound Emails with Action Mailbox in Rails
APM tools like AppSignal also provide a convenient dashboard to monitor all your outgoing ActionMailers and keep an eye on deliverability.
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Diving into Custom Exceptions in Ruby
Finding information in logs is a painful activity. Developers often blame themselves for not including more information about errors or how to search and filter. If you are not using any monitoring tools that provide this, including meaningful data could save you in the foreseeable future.
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Database Performance Optimization and Scaling in Rails
It can be tricky to keep an eye on the performance of your database without any other tools. Using AppSignal, you can easily track how your databases perform. See our AppSignal for Ruby page for more information.
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How to Scale Ruby on Rails Applications
The most important consideration with scalability is to identify bottlenecks in an application before we can act on them. A good performance monitoring tool can help. If you need one, check out AppSignal for Ruby.
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How to Track Down Memory Leaks in Ruby
Read more about AppSignal for Ruby.
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What resources do you recommend to learn about Rails APIs?
Performance/Monitoring - https://appsignal.com/
sdoc
- Who has the best documentation you’ve seen or like in 2023
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How to start?
Once you feel comfortable with both Ruby and Rails, try building a few simple apps on your own by reading the Rails Guides and browsing the Rails API whenever you're stuck.
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Examples on https://api.rubyonrails.org
Hi. I'm a self-taught Ruby on Rails programmer. I have a question about the documentation at https://api.rubyonrails.org. On many of the pages, you'll see methods and their details. Below that, you'll often see examples using different options. This is where I have a question. An example might look like this:
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Thoughts on a `.=` operator like `+=`?
If a method isn't documented in https://api.rubyonrails.org/ it shouldn't be used as we reserve the right to remove or change them at any point.
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Ask HN: Easiest and cheapest full-stack frameworks that you love?
Rails still holds the top spot in getting things out the door in the shortest amount of time. So many example projects and tons of amazing libraries that are available. They absolutely have the best developer docs in the industry as far as I'm concerned.
https://guides.rubyonrails.org/
https://api.rubyonrails.org/
Phoenix/Liveview is a close second. I would personally use Phoenix/Liveview at this point because since I know that stack pretty well, but it is definitely not as easy as Rails to learn. However, once past the learning phase I think there's distinct advantages especially with Liveview.
Fly.io has a free hosting tier currently. You can also get some free servers through Oracle Cloud.
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Any advice for a beginner?
https://api.rubyonrails.org is your best friend. Check the docs before googling. Instant access to the source of functions. ApiDock is shit but continuously gets to the top of google search results.
- Good tutorial that dumbs things way down?
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Books Recommendation for Beginners
For something more in-depth, besides the Rails Guides that have been mentioned already, you could also use the Rails API docs as a reference.
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Why does VSCode have no intellisense for Ruby on Rails (or am I missing something?)
Yeah visit guides.rubyonrails.org if you want to see how to do a particular thing like validations and stuff and use this website https://api.rubyonrails.org/ for seeing method definitions their options etc.. These two websites pretty much conver everything. I specially use the second on pretty frequently. Also I think sublime text is better for ruby on rails than vs code but thats personal preference. The ruby doc website is pretty good to for documentation on rubies standard classes. Like if you are looking for some method to do something for a string you can just search string ruby and this comes up first, it contains all public methods for these classes and is pretty useful.
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Is learning ruby ​​on rails in 2022 worth it?
If you mean the Rails API Documentation, I mainly use it when I use a method I'm not familiar with (eg trying to adapt a StackOverflow suggestion).
What are some alternatives?
Gitlab CI - GitLab CE Mirror | Please open new issues in our issue tracker on GitLab.com
rux - A jsx-inspired way to render view components in Ruby.
Nanobox - The ideal platform for developers
Knock - Seamless JWT authentication for Rails API
Inch CI - Web frontend for Inch CI
graphql - Ruby implementation of GraphQL
Codacy
super-bombinhas - A 2D platformer written in Ruby.
PR Dashboard
solargraph - A Ruby language server.