This gist shows how to create a GIF screencast using only free OS X tools: QuickTime, ffmpeg, and gifsicle.
To capture the video (filesize: 19MB), using the free "QuickTime Player" application:
I started a project on a Hobby Dev plan (free, limit 10,000 rows), and then later needed to upgrade it to Hobby Basic ($9/month, limit 10,000,000 rows).
After assigning the new database, I had two databases attached to the application. They looked something like this:
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# Ignore static version of the site (used to upload error pages to S3 for Heroku errors) | |
/out |
Simplest intro to git by github and codeschool - Try Git
[Intro to github]
It's important to note that running this reset will drop any existing data you have in the application
heroku restart
heroku pg:reset DATABASE
(no need to change the DATABASE
)heroku run rake db:migrate
heroku run rake db:seed
(if you have seed)One liner
require 'rails_helper' | |
RSpec.describe TodosController, :type => :controller do | |
describe "GET #index" do | |
#describe "POST #create" do | |
#describe "GET #show" do | |
#describe "PATCH #update" do (or PUT #update) | |
#describe "DELETE #destroy" do | |
#describe "GET #new" do |
#Simple Authentication with Bcrypt
This tutorial is for adding authentication to a vanilla Ruby on Rails app using Bcrypt and has_secure_password.
The steps below are based on Ryan Bates's approach from Railscast #250 Authentication from Scratch (revised).
You can see the final source code here: repo. I began with a stock rails app using rails new gif_vault
##Steps