CSC/ECE 517 Spring 2013/ch1a 1b mh: Difference between revisions
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==Introduction== | ==Introduction== | ||
Modern application delivery has undergone drastic changes in recent years, and the introduction of SaaS, or Software-as-a-Service, provides a way for software to be provided "on demand" to a user as needed. Essentially, what this means, is that users interact with a given application through a web based interface referred to as a "thin client", and another computer actually performs the applications computational tasks. The thin client is primarly tasked with displaying the application interface, and relaying the users actions back to the primary computational unit. Such a delivery model has many advantages, such as eliminating the need to install an application locally, and reducing the computational demand on the local client. In addition, this allows the hosting computer to provide an indeterminate number of interfaces to multiple users, as well as being able to free the resources used supplying the service once the user no longer needs them. The architecture used for many SaaS solutions is based on the "Model-View-Controller" architecture. This architecture is modular, easily expandable, very flexible, and many solutions have been created to help software engineers develop SaaS enviornments and by extension the delivery methods needed to produce these products. This article is primarily focused on the development suite, Rails, and in particular, 2 types of actions used by this software. | |||
Rails is a framework application development suite for SaaS development, based on the object-oriented language, Ruby, and based on the afore-mentioned Model-View-Controller architecture. | |||
==Overview of Model-View-Controller Architecture== | |||
==CRUD== | ==CRUD== |
Revision as of 00:30, 8 February 2013
Ruby CRUD - Update and Destroy
Introduction
Modern application delivery has undergone drastic changes in recent years, and the introduction of SaaS, or Software-as-a-Service, provides a way for software to be provided "on demand" to a user as needed. Essentially, what this means, is that users interact with a given application through a web based interface referred to as a "thin client", and another computer actually performs the applications computational tasks. The thin client is primarly tasked with displaying the application interface, and relaying the users actions back to the primary computational unit. Such a delivery model has many advantages, such as eliminating the need to install an application locally, and reducing the computational demand on the local client. In addition, this allows the hosting computer to provide an indeterminate number of interfaces to multiple users, as well as being able to free the resources used supplying the service once the user no longer needs them. The architecture used for many SaaS solutions is based on the "Model-View-Controller" architecture. This architecture is modular, easily expandable, very flexible, and many solutions have been created to help software engineers develop SaaS enviornments and by extension the delivery methods needed to produce these products. This article is primarily focused on the development suite, Rails, and in particular, 2 types of actions used by this software.
Rails is a framework application development suite for SaaS development, based on the object-oriented language, Ruby, and based on the afore-mentioned Model-View-Controller architecture.
Overview of Model-View-Controller Architecture
CRUD
Edit/Update
locate the object @object = Object.find params(:id) update it @object.update_attributes!(params[:param]) inform of successful update flash[:notice] go to the updated object redirect_to object_path(@object)
Comparison of Update and Create Actions
Destroy
locate the object @object = Object.find params(:id) destroy it @object.destroy inform of successful update flash[:notice] = "Object '#{@object.title}' deleted." go to the updated object redirect_to object_path(@object)