CSC/ECE 517 Fall 2009/wiki1b 7 b5: Difference between revisions
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The tutorial on RubyLearning provides more and larger code samples than the Little Book of Ruby. It also covers a few more niche topics. In particular note the "summary" pages, which provide a quick checklist of topics covered in the preceding sections. Skimming the summary pages will let you quickly decide if there's any new material to learn without having to read the whole thing. The direct link to the tutorial is [http://rubylearning.com/satishtalim/tutorial.html here]. | The tutorial on RubyLearning provides more and larger code samples than the Little Book of Ruby. It also covers a few more niche topics. In particular note the "summary" pages, which provide a quick checklist of topics covered in the preceding sections. Skimming the summary pages will let you quickly decide if there's any new material to learn without having to read the whole thing. The direct link to the tutorial is [http://rubylearning.com/satishtalim/tutorial.html here]. | ||
== | == Testing == | ||
=== [http://cukes.info/ Cucumber] === | === [http://cukes.info/ Cucumber] === | ||
Cucumber allows black box tests to be written in plain English, making test documentation and comprehension much easier. It also inherently promotes evaluation of the business value of the things you are testing, which is always a good idea. | Cucumber allows black box tests to be written in plain English, making test documentation and comprehension much easier. It also inherently promotes evaluation of the business value of the things you are testing, which is always a good idea. | ||
=== [http://wtr.rubyforge.org/ Watir] === | |||
Watir and its sister projects give you hooks into various web browsers for web based black box testing. Alternatively, [http://celerity.rubyforge.org/ Celerity] allows testing without requiring a browser, which results in faster, platform independent tests. | |||
== Ruby Projects == | == Ruby Projects == |
Revision as of 06:45, 21 September 2009
Resources for Ruby (other than IDEs)
Language Resources
The Little Book of Ruby
The Little Book of Ruby is an introduction to Ruby that quickly gets you started with Ruby programming. At only 90 pages (.pdf) and using simple, clear language, it's a very quick read. It assumes the reader has prior programming experience, though not necessarily in an object oriented language. All of the code used in the book is also available online.
Ruby QuickRef
Ruby QuickRef is an excellent resource for quickly looking up Ruby syntax. Rather than giving paragraphs of explanation and loads of examples, it simply provides the syntax in a well sectioned and easy to read format. Think of it as a Ruby cheat sheet.
RubyLearning
The tutorial on RubyLearning provides more and larger code samples than the Little Book of Ruby. It also covers a few more niche topics. In particular note the "summary" pages, which provide a quick checklist of topics covered in the preceding sections. Skimming the summary pages will let you quickly decide if there's any new material to learn without having to read the whole thing. The direct link to the tutorial is here.
Testing
Cucumber
Cucumber allows black box tests to be written in plain English, making test documentation and comprehension much easier. It also inherently promotes evaluation of the business value of the things you are testing, which is always a good idea.
Watir
Watir and its sister projects give you hooks into various web browsers for web based black box testing. Alternatively, Celerity allows testing without requiring a browser, which results in faster, platform independent tests.
Ruby Projects
RubyForge
RubyForge is basically SourceForge for only Ruby based projects. Learn about Ruby and Ruby development by seeing actual applications of the language, or contribute your own knowledge to a project.