Your tutorial has been more than worth that effort! The way I like to do tutorials is to type in every line of code myself, read the material at least twice, and do all exercises. I’ve been a very active software engineer since the late 70’s, always staying up with current technologies, and having a ball along the way. I’ve just completed all 14 chapters of the Ruby on Rails Tutorial, and I’m very, very satisfied with the results. The result is a thorough grounding in web application development that will serve you well as a technical manager, entrepreneur, or professional software developer. ![]() Finally, in Chapter 13 and Chapter 14 you’ll add microblogging and social features to make a working example site. Then, in Chapter 5 through Chapter 12, you’ll complete the foundation for the sample application by making a site layout, a user data model, and a full registration and authentication system (including account activation and password resets). You’ll take a quick detour in Chapter 4 to learn a little about the Ruby language underlying Rails. You’ll get started in Chapter 3 by creating static pages and then add a little dynamic content. You’ll develop the sample app using a combination of mockups, test-driven development (TDD), and integration tests. The rest of the tutorial focuses on developing a single large real sample application, writing all the code from scratch. ![]() ![]() Putting everything together Putting all your knowledge into action
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