The Ruby/Rails modularity slack server is a new community. Make sure you check out our Code of Conduct!
The following are some principles that we hope will help allow this community to be a helpful resource for all.
These principles are not intended to be hard "rules," but rather some things to keep in mind that we hope will help the forum be more accessible and engaging for everyone.
We think its valuable to try to give concrete examples when talking in the very abstract. That might mean code snippets, describing specific problems, and more! We'd love to see real things you've built and/or are running in production.
Remember that we're all here to work together to solve similar problems. Let's try to stay mindful of the fact that different folks may have different approaches. We should still feel comfortable talking openly about the pros and cons of different approaches.
We want to hear what you're up to, what tools you use, and more. Remember that this is not a forum to market your (or your favorite) product, company, or tool. We can of course share the tools we use and our experience with them, though.
It would be great to learn about how modularity is solved using different stacks, different frameworks, and different languages. Naturally, software languages have evolved from and coevolved with each other, so the more that we can learn from other implementations, the better.
Good guidelines! Thanks for setting them up 🥰