Also welcome!

I would also add http://railscasts.com/. Ryan Bates has a lot of really good videos on his site.

Ken


On Apr 14, 2010, at 10:05 AM, Jason King wrote:

First, welcome.

Regarding resources, I still recommend the seminal Rails book, Agile Web Development with Rails: http://is.gd/bsAtb Then I'd also recommend the Rails guides: http://guides.rubyonrails.org/ and the best place there to start, although I don't think it is linked to from anywhere, is: http://guides.rubyonrails.org/2_3_release_notes.html

There are also a lot of useful walkthroughs, tutorials and stuff on Peepcode: http://peepcode.com/ And if you could do with a great Ruby tune-up then this: http://pine.fm/LearnToProgram/ is a great way to do it (and yes, the book *is* worth the extra).

Now, word of warning: you happen to have arrived during what is probably the biggest transition Rails has had since it was released, from Rails2 to Rails3.

Rails3 has just seen it's 3rd beta release, and with only about 60 currently outstanding bugs it could be as close as a few weeks away from RC1.

Meanwhile, virtually all the resources available are going to be for Rails2.3 (the current stable release is 2.3.5). There are already some beta books out for Rails3 like http://is.gd/bsAq6 and a lot of blogging about new features, so be aware of this, and be sure you're looking at the right materials.

Last but not least, the full Rails API is available locally on any machine you've installed Rails on through the ri tool, also browsable (along with the docs of any other gems you have installed) by running `gem server` from the command prompt and hitting http://localhost:8808/ , and also online at http://api.rubyonrails.org/ It might take a bit of time to get used to them (none of those three are particularly great formats) - but there's a lot of information in a very condensed form.

I should also mention http://sdruby.org/podcast

Ok, deep breath, that was an unusually helpful mail from me. I think my wife spiked my coffee with happy beans this morning.

Regards,
Jason

On Apr 12, 2010, at 1:27 PM, Paul L wrote:

My name is Paul and my question is:
What resources are available to learn Ruby on Rails?

Browsed books at Borders has helped and reading Head First Rails seems
like a a good introduction. It is project based and very engaging.

Practical Rails Plugins by Apress is interesting, but installing
plugins is frustrating because of SVN versus GIT.

Messing around with PHP and developing some apps in ActionScript, has
been valuable, but it's no formal degree in Computer Science.

I look forward to meeting everyone at the next meeting =)

Paul

--
SD Ruby mailing list
[email protected]
http://groups.google.com/group/sdruby

To unsubscribe, reply using "remove me" as the subject.


--
SD Ruby mailing list
[email protected]
http://groups.google.com/group/sdruby

http://www.nealstreetdesign.com
http://www.shareastronomy.com






--
SD Ruby mailing list
[email protected]
http://groups.google.com/group/sdruby

Reply via email to