This book is very good, but I strongly SUGGEST and cannot hardly STRESS ENOUGH for every newbie with Ruby on Rails -- LEARN RUBY FIRST. I am telling you, this will benefit thousand times later when you start developing. At the moment I am writing this review this 2nd edition of the books is outdat
Agile Web Development with Rails, 2nd Edition
โ Scribed by Dave Thomas, David Hansson, Leon Breedt, Mike Clark, James Duncan Davidson, Justin Gehtland, Andreas Schwarz
- Publisher
- Pragmatic Bookshelf
- Year
- 2006
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 723
- Edition
- 2
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
The definitive, Jolt-award winning guide to learning and using Rails is now in its Second Edition. Rails is a new approach to web-based application development that enables developers to create full-featured, sophisticated web-based applications using less code and less effort. Now programmers can g
This book is very good, but I strongly SUGGEST and cannot hardly STRESS ENOUGH for every newbie with Ruby on Rails -- LEARN RUBY FIRST. I am telling you, this will benefit thousand times later when you start developing. At the moment I am writing this review this 2nd edition of the books is outdat
I picked up this book after reading a different Rails book. The other book was okay, but left me with a lot of questions. That is not the case with this book. The first section of the book is real basic while you build an e-commerce application. The second half of the book shines. It goes into great
It's a good text, but it might be recommended that an Agile Development specific book be read, either beforehand or concurrently, while evolving the knowledge imparted in these pages. "The Art of Agile Development" by James Shore is a good compliment to this reading. Agile of course, does not only
It's a good text, but it might be recommended that an Agile Development specific book be read, either beforehand or concurrently, while evolving the knowledge imparted in these pages. "The Art of Agile Development" by James Shore is a good compliment to this reading. Agile of course, does not only