upcase
Hanami
upcase | Hanami | |
---|---|---|
8 | 22 | |
281 | 6,190 | |
1.4% | 0.4% | |
7.5 | 7.8 | |
7 days ago | 2 days ago | |
Ruby | Ruby | |
MIT License | 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.
upcase
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OOP vs. services for organizing business logic: is there a third way?
github.com/thoughtbot/upcase (14k lines): Learning platform for developers.
- RoR Resources
- First Job?
- Rails course
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Learning more about rails
https://thoughtbot.com/upcase/rails
- Looking for a learning resource I've lost
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Daily Discussion Thread
This site also has courses on web dev. Plus extra courses such as a course on refactoring that I really liked.
- Meu primeiro processo seletivo (e job offer) com uma empresa estrangeira
Hanami
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16 Best Ruby Frameworks For Web Development [2024]
With a clean architectural design and a primary object methodology, Hanami is counted among the best ruby frameworks that have gained popularity as an alternative to Rails. Hanami is “sorted” in design and provides small files that can be used independently to create a project stack. Hanami is lightweight and consumes fewer resources claiming 60% lesser memory than other big Ruby frameworks.
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Is Ruby a dying language?
No, it's just no longer over-hyped. Ruby is settling into being a mature production language, similar to Python, Java, .NET, C++, etc. As you can see from the RedMonk 2023 data Ruby is very much still alive with tons of repositories on GitHub. Besides Shopify, GitHub is another big Ruby/Rails shop. Also, besides Rails, there are other new and upcoming projects like Hanami, DragonRuby, and Ronin.
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Web Frameworks actively maintained in 2023?
Hanami 2 (hanamirb.org)
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Enhancing development with REPLs - A practical guide
On all my application tutorials I start by setting up an application level REPL, it's basically a console script that loads all the files inside your project, if you're using a framework like Ruby on Rails or Hanami you already have a console by running the command console also.
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Why are there so many Rails related posts here?
This is something that kind of annoys me; there's even a /r/rails sub-reddit specifically for Ruby on Rails stuff. Understandably Rails helped put Ruby on the map. Before Rails, Ruby was just another fringe language. Rails became massively popular, helped many startups quickly build their Web 2.0 sites, and become successful companies (ex: GitHub, LinkedIn, AirBnB, etc). Like others have said, "Rails is where the money is at". However, this posses a problem for the Ruby community: whenever Rails becomes less popular, so does Ruby. I wish the Ruby ecosystem wasn't so heavily centralized around Rails, and that we diversified our uses of Ruby a bit. There's of course Sinatra, dry-rb, Hanami, Dragon Ruby, SciRuby, and a dozen security tools written in Ruby such as Metasploit, BeFF, Arachni, and Ronin.
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Two months into learning Ruby, it is the most beautiful language I ever learned
Welcome! Ruby isn't exactly "dying", but the hype/popularity is definitely fading. This is primarily because Ruby is no longer "new", most of Ruby's popularity came from Rails, and now Rails is no longer the "new hotness". However, Ruby still has lots of awesome features and lots of awesome other libraries and frameworks, such as the new fancy irb gem that uses reline, nokogiri, chunky_png, the async gems, Dragon Ruby, SciRuby, Ronin, and the new Hanami web framework.
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OOP vs. services for organizing business logic: is there a third way?
Data Oriented Web Development with Ruby (upcoming book) by Peter Solnica, who is on the Hanami core team. Learning Hanami wouldn't be a bad idea either.
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Understanding Clean Architecture with small Ruby libraries
After about 5 laps around Clean architecture since I came across hanami/hanami: The web, with simplicity., I'm finally getting it down in my gut, so I'll summarize.
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Utilizando o padrão interactor no Ruby on Rails
View on GitHub
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Writing a web application in pure Ruby (no framework)?
If it’s just an issue with Rails, then might I suggest looking at https://hanamirb.org - it’s a framework, but one built from the lessons learned from rails and all who followed.
What are some alternatives?
open-product-management - A curated list of product management advice for technical people.
Sinatra - Classy web-development dressed in a DSL (official / canonical repo)
Akeneo PIM - [Community Standard Edition] The open source Product Information Management (PIM) - please raise issues in https://github.com/akeneo/pim-community-dev/issues
Roda - Routing Tree Web Toolkit
ruby-science - The reference for writing fantastic Rails applications
Ruby on Rails - Ruby on Rails
oh-my-git - An interactive Git learning game!
Padrino - Padrino is a full-stack ruby framework built upon Sinatra.
ventable - Event/Observable support for plain ruby with options for grouping observers and wrapping notifications in blocks of code, such as transaction handling.
Cuba - Rum based microframework for web development.
Mastodon - Your self-hosted, globally interconnected microblogging community
Volt - A Ruby web framework where your Ruby runs on both server and client