learn-ruby-and-cs
awesome-rails
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learn-ruby-and-cs | awesome-rails | |
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16 | 7 | |
99 | 3,563 | |
- | 1.7% | |
8.7 | 5.9 | |
over 1 year ago | 23 days ago | |
HTML | ||
- | MIT License |
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.
learn-ruby-and-cs
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self teaching
For ideas on what to study next, you could take a look at my list of learning resources that I've been building up over these two years: https://github.com/fpsvogel/learn-ruby-and-cs
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Development plan as a Junior Dev
Here's a list of mostly Ruby and Rails learning resources that I've been building up, using it to keep track of my own learning path: https://github.com/fpsvogel/learn-ruby-and-cs. I hope it gives you some ideas!
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The first six months: lessons learned as a junior developer
Set goals. Identify one or two areas where you want to improve, and focus on those. For me it helps that I already have lots to choose from in my "Learning Ruby" list, which I've been building up for the past two years.
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Need Guidance
For lots more suggested resources, see this list which I've been keeping up since I started learning Ruby two years ago: https://github.com/fpsvogel/learn-ruby-and-cs
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Has anyone here gone through the Odin Project? If so, would you recommend it or another resource for someone looking to learn Rails to build a SaaS?
If you're starting from zero knowledge of Rails, I think the best starting point is the Rails for Beginners video series by GoRails. Then after that you can branch out to more specific tutorials (e.g. Stripe, like someone already mentioned), and at some point it'd be good to dive deeper into Ruby and Rails (here's a list of resources that I've made for that).
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Online Rails Course Recommendations?
Rails for Beginners by GoRails is an amazing (and free!) way to learn the basics, but as a beginner myself I've found that a lot of the content on GoRails is a bit too advanced to be immediately useful. I've been keeping a list of resources that have been helpful to me, which may be useful to you: https://github.com/fpsvogel/learn-ruby-and-cs
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How can I get into Ruby and RoR asap?
Rails for Beginners by GoRails is a great intro that doesn't take long. From there, googling "rails + graphql" should get you the rest of the way. If you want to firm up your Ruby or Rails knowledge after that, see the resources I've listed at https://github.com/fpsvogel/learn-ruby-and-cs.
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Resources
I've been compiling a list of resources ever since I started learning Ruby two years ago: https://github.com/fpsvogel/learn-ruby-and-cs. It's long but I try to include only resources that I really liked, or (in the case of to-do items) that look compelling.
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Ruby developer roadmap
Here's my roadmap that I keep up to date: https://github.com/fpsvogel/learn-ruby-and-cs. I started learning Ruby two years ago, and earlier this year I got my first dev job in Rails.
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Roadmap to learn ruby
Here are a bunch of learning resources that I've been compiling into a list, which may be useful to you. They're not organized by concept like you propose, but for me the easiest way to learn was to do a tutorial/book or two, then build a project, then repeat. That way I learned the concepts without having to map them out, though I've made lots of notes on different concepts along the way.
awesome-rails
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Learning rails just to build API's?
There are also plenty of other resources that might be of use, like the awesome rails collection.
- What are some excellent open-source Rails apps?
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Which websites did you guys known that are made with rails and are open-source?
https://github.com/gramantin/awesome-rails has a large list of varying quality
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Best way to go about fragmenting a Monolithic Rails application into Microservices.
Thereβs a curated list of Open Source Rails Apps. - Not sure how many of these are modularized into engines.
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Looking to work for free/minimum payment to gain experience
This seems interesting: https://github.com/gramantin/awesome-rails
- RoR newbie
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Ruby developer roadmap
- Code code code, use codewars.com for challenges in ruby, ask questions on the discord and discourse and try to help others, and maybe look at some Open Sourece projects in rails to get a sense of a small project compared to a massive project in rails. You can find all kinds of exampels here: https://github.com/gramantin/awesome-rails
What are some alternatives?
p1xt-guides - Programming curricula
lamby-cookiecutter - ππ€ AWS SAM Cookiecutter to Quick Start Rails & Lambda
ruby_koans - Learn Ruby with the Edgecase Ruby Koans
rails-viewcomponent-rspec-tailwind - Confidently develop Rails app views with reusable components.
awesome-visual-slam - :books: The list of vision-based SLAM / Visual Odometry open source, blogs, and papers
packwerk - Good things come in small packages.
human-essentials - Human Essentials is an inventory management system for diaper, incontinence, and period-supply banks. It supports them in distributing to partners, tracking inventory, and reporting stats and analytics.
awesome-capacitor - π Awesome lists of capacitor plugins.
awesome-readme - A curated list of awesome READMEs
Open-Source-Ruby-and-Rails-Apps - Awesome Ruby and Rails Open Source applications π
export-pull-requests - Export pull requests and/or issues to a CSV file. Supports GitHub, GitLab, and Bitbucket
awesome-compose - Awesome Docker Compose samples