Book Image

The Ruby Workshop

By : Akshat Paul, Peter Philips, Dániel Szabó, Cheyne Wallace
Book Image

The Ruby Workshop

By: Akshat Paul, Peter Philips, Dániel Szabó, Cheyne Wallace

Overview of this book

The beauty of Ruby is its readability and expressiveness. Ruby hides away a lot of the complexity of programming, allowing you to work quickly and 'do more' with fewer lines of code. This makes it a great programming language for beginners, but learning any new skill can still be a daunting task. If you want to learn to code using Ruby, but don't know where to start, The Ruby Workshop will help you cut through the noise and make sense of this fun, flexible language. You'll start by writing and running simple code snippets and Ruby source code files. After learning about strings, numbers, and booleans, you'll see how to store collections of objects with arrays and hashes. You'll then learn how to control the flow of a Ruby program using boolean logic. The book then delves into OOP and explains inheritance, encapsulation, and polymorphism. Gradually, you'll build your knowledge of advanced concepts by learning how to interact with external APIs, before finally exploring the most popular Ruby framework ? Ruby on Rails ? and using it for web development. Throughout this book, you'll work on a series of realistic projects, including simple games, a voting application, and an online blog. By the end of this Ruby book, you'll have the knowledge, skills and confidence to creatively tackle your own ambitious projects with Ruby.
Table of Contents (14 chapters)

12. Introduction to Ruby on Rails II

Activity 12.01: Create a Blog Application and Host It Live on a Cloud Platform

Solution

Part I – Create a blog application with the following features

  1. Create a new application and run the following command from Terminal:
    $ rails new blog

    The output should be as follows:

    Figure 12.28: Initializing a new application

  2. Go into the blog directory and run the following scaffolding command from Terminal to generate MVC files and a folder structure for post:
    $ cd blog 
    $ rails generate scaffold post title:string body:text

    The output should be as follows:

    Figure 12.29: Using scaffolding to create files and a folder structure

    Figure 12.29: Using scaffolding to create files and a folder structure

  3. The scaffold command creates a lot of files and folder structures, essentially creating all the files required for CRUD operations. It has a model, a controller, migration, and views all generated in one go. Scaffolding is very powerful syntactic sugar, doing a lot of repetitive tasks quickly and saving time.
  4. ...