Book Image

From PHP to Ruby on Rails

By : Bernard Pineda
4 (1)
Book Image

From PHP to Ruby on Rails

4 (1)
By: Bernard Pineda

Overview of this book

Are you a PHP developer looking to take your first steps into the world of Ruby development? From PHP to Ruby on Rails will help you leverage your existing knowledge to gain expertise in Ruby on Rails. With a focus on bridging the gap between PHP and Ruby, this guide will help you develop the Ruby mindset, set up your local environment, grasp the syntax, master scripting, explore popular Ruby frameworks, and find out about libraries and gems. This book offers a unique take on Ruby from the perspective of a seasoned PHP developer who initially refused to learn other technologies, but never looked back after taking the leap. As such, it teaches with a language-agnostic approach that will help you feel at home in any programming language without learning everything from scratch. This approach will help you avoid common mistakes such as writing Ruby as if it were PHP and increase your understanding of the programming ecosystem as a whole. By the end of this book, you'll have gained a solid understanding of Ruby, its ecosystem, and how it compares to PHP, enabling you to build robust and scalable applications using Ruby on Rails.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)
1
Part 1:From PHP to Ruby Basics
8
Part 2:Ruby and the Web

Why nginx?

Coming from a PHP background, one of the concepts that was difficult for me to grasp was Rails’ lack of the out-of-the-box server functionality seen in PHP. With PHP, if it is installed, you can open a shell and type the following:

php -S localhost:9000

This will bring up an internal PHP server. You can now open a browser, point it to http://localhost:9000/, and that’s all you need to do. Any PHP scripts we add to the same folder where we started the PHP server will be available to said server. We don’t need any PHP framework to start programming in PHP. We can use this internal server for development and once we deploy our PHP application to a production server, our application just requires a web server that has PHP enabled. This is an oversimplification of how it’s actually done, but in essence, that’s all that’s needed for PHP servers.

In the good ol’ days, Apache was the way to go. These days, you can still use...