HAPPY BOOKSGIVING
Use code BOOKSGIVING during checkout to save 40%-55% on books and eBooks. Shop now.
Register your product to gain access to bonus material or receive a coupon.
“Ruby on Rails™ Tutorial by Michael Hartl has become a must-read for developers learning how to build Rails apps.”
—Peter Cooper, Editor of Ruby Inside
Used by sites as diverse as Twitter, GitHub, Disney, and the Yellow Pages, Ruby on Rails is one of the most popular frameworks for developing web applications, but it can be challenging to learn and use. Whether you’re new to web development or new only to Rails, Ruby on Rails™ Tutorial, Third Edition, is the solution.
Best-selling author and leading Rails developer Michael Hartl teaches Rails by guiding you through the development of three example applications of increasing sophistication, focusing on the fundamental techniques in web development needed for virtually any kind of application. The updates to this edition include simplified installation via a standard development environment in the cloud, use of the default Rails stack throughout, a light-weight testing approach, an all-new section on image upload, and an all-new chapter on account activation and password resets, including sending email with Rails.
This indispensable guide provides integrated tutorials not only for Rails, but also for the essential Ruby, HTML, CSS, and SQL skills you’ll need when developing web applications. Hartl explains how each new technique solves a real-world problem, and then he demonstrates it with bite-sized code that’s simple enough to understand, yet novel enough to be useful. Whatever your previous web development experience, this book will guide you to true Rails mastery.
This book will help you
Please visit the author's site here.
Please visit the website associated with Ruby on Rails Tutorial at here.
Ruby on Rails Tutorial: A Toy App
Download the sample pages (includes Chapter 2 and Index)
Foreword to the First Edition by Derek Sivers xvii
Foreword to the Third Edition by Obie Fernandez xix
Acknowledgments xxi
About the Author xxiii
Chapter 1: From Zero to Deploy 1
1.1 Introduction 4
1.2 Up and Running 8
1.3 The First Application 12
1.4 Version Control with Git 29
1.5 Deploying 41
1.6 Conclusion 47
1.7 Exercises 48
Chapter 2: A Toy App 51
2.1 Planning the Application 52
2.2 The Users Resource 55
2.3 The Microposts Resource 71
2.4 Conclusion 82
2.5 Exercises 84
Chapter 3: Mostly Static Pages 87
3.1 Sample App Setup 87
3.2 Static Pages 91
3.3 Getting Started with Testing 101
3.4 Slightly Dynamic Pages 111
3.5 Conclusion 124
3.6 Exercises 125
3.7 Advanced Testing Setup 127
Chapter 4: Rails-Flavored Ruby 137
4.1 Motivation 137
4.2 Strings and Methods 142
4.3 Other Data Structures 152
4.4 Ruby Classes 164
4.5 Conclusion 175
4.6 Exercises 176
Chapter 5: Filling in the Layout 179
5.1 Adding Some Structure 179
5.2 Sass and the Asset Pipeline 200
5.3 Layout Links 210
5.4 User Sign-up: A First Step 219
5.5 Conclusion 223
5.6 Exercises 225
Chapter 6: Modeling Users 227
6.1 User Model 228
6.2 User Validations 241
6.3 Adding a Secure Password 261
6.4 Conclusion 269
6.5 Exercises 271
Chapter 7: Sign Up 275
7.1 Showing Users 275
7.2 Sign-up Form 293
7.3 Unsuccessful Sign-ups 302
7.4 Successful Sign-ups 316
7.5 Professional-Grade Deployment 326
7.6 Conclusion 330
7.7 Exercises 331
Chapter 8: Log In, Log Out 335
8.1 Sessions 336
8.2 Logging In 351
8.3 Logging Out 368
8.4 Remember Me 371
8.5 Conclusion 404
8.6 Exercises 406
Chapter 9: Updating, Showing, and Deleting Users 411
9.1 Updating Users 411
9.2 Authorization 424
9.3 Showing All Users 440
9.4 Deleting Users 456
9.5 Conclusion 466
9.6 Exercises 468
Chapter 10: Account Activation and Password Reset 471
10.1 Account Activation 471
10.2 Password Reset 506
10.3 Email in Production 532
10.4 Conclusion 534
10.5 Exercises 536
10.6 Proof of Expiration Comparison 539
Chapter 11: User Microposts 541
11.1 A Micropost Model 541
11.2 Showing Microposts 555
11.3 Manipulating Microposts 568
11.4 Micropost Images 593
11.5 Conclusion 606
11.6 Exercises 609
Chapter 12: Following Users 613
12.1 The Relationship Model 614
12.2 A Web Interface for Following Users 630
12.3 The Status Feed 661
12.4 Conclusion 671
12.5 Exercises 673
Index 675