This is the eBook version of the printed book. Since David Heinemeier Hansson’s keynote speech at RailsConf 2006 and the release of Rails 1.2 in early 2007, Representational State Transfer, better known as REST, has taken the Rails world by storm. If you’re new to REST, this short cut will help you decide which parts of the REST paradigm you want to introduce to your application. If you’re a developer with more RESTful experience, this short cut will introduce you to some refactorings that will give your application a cleaner, leaner code base, while also serving as a reference to much of the functionality REST has brought to Rails. Section 1: What This Short Cut Covers 3 Section 2: What Is REST? 6 Section 3: Refactorings 10 Section 4: RESTful Controllers 31 Section 5: RESTful Routes 48 Section 6: RESTful Views 54 Section 7: RESTful Tests 59 Section 8: RESTful Authentication 61 Section 9: Consuming RESTful APIs 63 Resources 72 About the Author 73
GET STRAIGHT TO THE LEADING EDGE WITH RUBY AND RAILS Information thatrs"s so hot, new, and valuable, you canrs"t wait for a book. This package brings together 8 breakthrough primers on todayrs"s most valuable Ruby and Rails technologies -- including five new digital Short Cuts worth $69.95! From RailsSpace to ActiveRecord to Mongrel, herers"s new content, techniques, and code from the Ruby communityrs"s top innovators: insiderrs"s information thatrs"s never been available before in one place. On the CD-ROM: 5 brand-new digital Short Cuts... Mongrel: Serving, Deploying, and Extending Your Ruby Applications, by Matt Pelletier and Zed Shaw Rails Plugins: Extending Rails Beyond the Core, by James Adam Rails Routing, by David A. Black Rails Refactoring to Resources: Using CRUD and REST in Your Rails Application, by Trotter Cashion Rubyisms in Rails, by Jacob Harris PLUS, PRINTED BONUS CONTENT INCLUDES Working with Active Record (from the forthcoming Addison-Wesley book The Rails Way by Obie Fernandez) RESTful Blogs (from RailsSpace by Michael Hartl and Aurelius Prochazka) OOP and Dynamic Features in Ruby (from The Ruby Way, Second Edition, by Hal Fulton)
This is the eBook version of the printed book. Since David Heinemeier Hansson’s keynote speech at RailsConf 2006 and the release of Rails 1.2 in early 2007, Representational State Transfer, better known as REST, has taken the Rails world by storm. If you’re new to REST, this short cut will help you decide which parts of the REST paradigm you want to introduce to your application. If you’re a developer with more RESTful experience, this short cut will introduce you to some refactorings that will give your application a cleaner, leaner code base, while also serving as a reference to much of the functionality REST has brought to Rails. Section 1: What This Short Cut Covers 3 Section 2: What Is REST? 6 Section 3: Refactorings 10 Section 4: RESTful Controllers 31 Section 5: RESTful Routes 48 Section 6: RESTful Views 54 Section 7: RESTful Tests 59 Section 8: RESTful Authentication 61 Section 9: Consuming RESTful APIs 63 Resources 72 About the Author 73
Thank you for visiting our website. Would you like to provide feedback on how we could improve your experience?
This site does not use any third party cookies with one exception — it uses cookies from Google to deliver its services and to analyze traffic.Learn More.