- Jim Weirich: The Building Blocks of Modularity – http://goo.gl/g4Nk
- Jim Weirich: SOLID Ruby – http://goo.gl/z3jd
- Sandi Metz: SOLID Object-Oriented Design – http://goo.gl/PDn6T
- Sandi Metz: Less – The Path to Better Design – http://goo.gl/VuTl4
- Demeter is for Encapsulation – http://is.gd/eeyLx
- Opinionated Modular Code – http://is.gd/eeyXm
- Scaling to Hundreds of Millions of Requests – http://vimeo.com/12814529
- Confident Code – http://goo.gl/VFLX
- Destroy All Software Screencasts – https://www.destroyallsoftware.com/screencasts
- Corey Haines: Fast Rails Tests – http://goo.gl/Va2gb
How to setup Heroku Hostname SSL with GoDaddy SSL Certificate and Zerigo DNS | |
Heroku recently added an exciting new 'Hostname SSL' option. This option offers the broad compatibility of IP-based SSL, but at 1/5 the price ($20 / month at the time of this writing). | |
The following tutorial explains how to use Heroku's new 'Hostname SSL' option on your Heroku project. Before we begin, let's list what we're using here: | |
* Heroku Hostname SSL | |
* GoDaddy Standard SSL Certificate | |
* Zerigo DNS |
# RSpec 2.0 syntax Cheet Sheet by http://ApproachE.com | |
# defining spec within a module will automatically pick Player::MovieList as a 'subject' (see below) | |
module Player | |
describe MovieList, "with optional description" do | |
it "is pending example, so that you can write ones quickly" | |
it "is already working example that we want to suspend from failing temporarily" do | |
pending("working on another feature that temporarily breaks this one") |
$ git branch -r --merged | | |
awk -F'/' '/^ *origin/{if(!match($0, /(>|master)/)){print $2}}' | | |
xargs git push origin --delete |
-
The new rake task assets:clean removes precompiled assets. [fxn]
-
Application and plugin generation run bundle install unless
--skip-gemfile
or--skip-bundle
. [fxn] -
Fixed database tasks for jdbc* adapters #jruby [Rashmi Yadav]
-
Template generation for jdbcpostgresql #jruby [Vishnu Atrai]
# WAIT! Do consider that `wait` may not be needed. This article describes | |
# that reasoning. Please read it and make informed decisions. | |
# https://www.varvet.com/blog/why-wait_until-was-removed-from-capybara/ | |
# Have you ever had to sleep() in Capybara-WebKit to wait for AJAX and/or CSS animations? | |
describe 'Modal' do | |
should 'display login errors' do | |
visit root_path |
Fibur is a library that allows concurrency during Ruby I/O operations without needing to make use of callback systems. Traditionally in Ruby, to achieve concurrency during blocking I/O operations, programmers would make use of Fibers and callbacks. Fibur eliminates the need for wrapping your I/O calls with Fibers and a callback. It allows you to write your blocking I/O calls the way you normally would, and still have concurrent execution during those I/O calls.
Say you have a method that fetches data from a network resource:
This installs a patched ruby 1.9.3-p327 with various performance improvements and a backported COW-friendly GC, all courtesy of funny-falcon.
You will also need a C Compiler. If you're on Linux, you probably already have one or know how to install one. On OS X, you should install XCode, and brew install autoconf
using homebrew.
This script installs a patched version of ruby 1.9.3-p125 with patches to make ruby-debug work again (#47) and boot-time performance improvements (#66 and #68), and runtime performance improvements (#83 and #84). It also includes the new backported GC from ruby-trunk.
Huge thanks to funny-falcon for the performance patches.
function AttachmentCtrl($scope, $location, $timeout, Docs) { | |
$(function() { | |
$('#detail-form-doc').fileupload({ | |
dataType: 'json', | |
url: '/angular-ib/app/fileupload?id=' + $location.search().id, | |
add: function(e, data) { | |
$scope.$apply(function(scope) { | |
// Turn the FileList object into an Array | |
for (var i = 0; i < data.files.length; i++) { | |
$scope.project.files.push(data.files[i]); |