ROM
rubychanges
ROM | rubychanges | |
---|---|---|
5 | 6 | |
2,065 | 190 | |
0.1% | 0.5% | |
5.5 | 6.6 | |
15 days ago | 3 months ago | |
Ruby | Ruby | |
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.
ROM
-
Understanding Clean Architecture with small Ruby libraries
Object Mapper: rom-rb/rom: Data mapping and persistence toolkit for Ruby
-
Rails is not written in Ruby
Just wanted to say that the authors libraries, especially ROM [0], are incredible and have played a huge influence on me as a developer. I learned a lot using and diving through the code.
[0]: https://rom-rb.org/
-
Catching up on things
Better gems. dry-rb, ROM, and Hanami are doing interesting stuff. I also hear web_pipe is popular?
-
10 Years of Open Source
This is exactly how I ended up contributing to DataMapper, then joining the core team, then releasing Virtus, then working on DataMapper 2.0, then turning it into rom-rb, then joining dry-rb and building 1.25 library / month on average for about 2 years or so to eventually join Hanami team...and, yeah, it's been kinda nuts now when I look back.
-
Best of (Ruby) Gems Series - What's Next? What's Hot?
Ruby Object Mapper
rubychanges
-
Question about the language (beginner)
If you want to know what Ruby changes, a good reference is Ruby changes
-
Ruby's Switch Statement Is More Flexible Than You Thought
May I recommend to anyone facing similar issues and who may have at least some agency in dealing with the problem (can't assume you do, so forgive me in that case) the incredible work of Victor Shepelev with Ruby References: https://rubyreferences.github.io/rubychanges/evolution.html
The site presents evolutions of Ruby since version 2.0 in an editorialized and well-written categorized release journal called "Ruby Evolution": https://rubyreferences.github.io/rubychanges/evolution.html
There's also individual version releases annotated as well, for example for the recent Ruby 3.2: https://rubyreferences.github.io/rubychanges/3.2.html
Note that these are not copies of the NEWS.md typically released when minor and major versions of Ruby come out. Victor specifically spent time to write more descriptive notes of what each notable change occurred over time. It's an incredible resource and we're extremely lucky to have him in our community.
There's even a changelog for this meta-changelog, which makes my little Keep a Changelog heart sing, so you can see evolutions of this site over time as well: https://rubyreferences.github.io/rubychanges/
-
Ruby 3.2.0 Released
Annotated changes are expected to be ready somewhere before the New Year, hopefully.
-
Comprehensive Ruby 3.1 changelog
But it is a GitHub repo from the very beginning :)
- Catching up on things
-
Comprehensive Ruby 3.0 changelog
Open: the source of changelog is available on the GitHub and is open for fixes and suggestions.
What are some alternatives?
Sequel - Sequel: The Database Toolkit for Ruby
web_pipe - One-way pipe, composable, rack application builder
ActiveRecord
DistorteD - Ruby multimedia toolkit with deep Jekyll integration 🧪
DataMapper
toe_tag - Utilities for categorizing and specifying exceptions.
Hanami::Model - Ruby persistence framework with entities and repositories
rbs - Type Signature for Ruby
Ohm - Object-Hash Mapping for Redis
docsearch - :blue_book: The easiest way to add search to your documentation.
Mongoid - The Official Ruby Object Mapper for MongoDB
ruby - The Ruby Programming Language