Book Image

Crystal Programming

By : George Dietrich, Guilherme Bernal
Book Image

Crystal Programming

By: George Dietrich, Guilherme Bernal

Overview of this book

Crystal is a programming language with a concise and user-friendly syntax, along with a seamless system and a performant core, reaching C-like speed. This book will help you gain a deep understanding of the fundamental concepts of Crystal and show you how to apply them to create various types of applications. This book comes packed with step-by-step explanations of essential concepts and practical examples. You'll learn how to use Crystal’s features to create complex and organized projects relying on OOP and its most common design patterns. As you progress, you'll gain a solid understanding of both the basic and advanced features of Crystal. This will enable you to build any application, including command-line interface (CLI) programs and web applications using IOs, concurrency and C bindings, HTTP servers, and the JSON API. By the end of this programming book, you’ll be equipped with the skills you need to use Crystal programming for building and understanding any application you come across.
Table of Contents (26 chapters)
1
Part 1: Getting Started
5
Part 2: Learning by Doing – CLI
10
Part 3: Learn by Doing – Web Application
13
Part 4: Metaprogramming
18
Part 5: Supporting Tools

WebAssembly

WebAssembly is a new standard for a compilation target that is quickly growing in popularity, and not just on the web. It offers portability to run anywhere with near-native speed: web browsers, cloud servers, embedded devices, plugins, blockchains, and more. Also, it allows different languages to interoperate in a convenient format, and it is secure and verifiable before execution.

There is ongoing work to add targeting support to the compiler and the standard library, making it easy to write a Crystal program that can run anywhere and accepts WebAssembly. The Crystal 1.4.0 release shipped with the initial experimental implementation, with most of the standard library already working.

Please refer to issue #12002 for an up-to-date progress status.