Rails Refactoring to Resources (Digital Short Cut)

Using CRUD and REST in Your Rails Application

Nonfiction, Computers, Programming, Programming Languages
Cover of the book Rails Refactoring to Resources (Digital Short Cut) by Trotter Cashion, Pearson Education
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Trotter Cashion ISBN: 9780132701846
Publisher: Pearson Education Publication: April 13, 2007
Imprint: Addison-Wesley Professional Language: English
Author: Trotter Cashion
ISBN: 9780132701846
Publisher: Pearson Education
Publication: April 13, 2007
Imprint: Addison-Wesley Professional
Language: English

This is the eBook version of the printed book.

Since David Heinemeier Hansson’s keynote speech at RailsConf 2006 and the release of Rails 1.2 in early 2007, Representational State Transfer, better known as REST, has taken the Rails world by storm. If you’re new to REST, this short cut will help you decide which parts of the REST paradigm you want to introduce to your application. If you’re a developer with more RESTful experience, this short cut will introduce you to some refactorings that will give your application a cleaner, leaner code base, while also serving as a reference to much of the functionality REST has brought to Rails.

 

Section 1: What This Short Cut Covers 3

Section 2: What Is REST? 6

Section 3: Refactorings 10

Section 4: RESTful Controllers 31

Section 5: RESTful Routes 48

Section 6: RESTful Views 54

Section 7: RESTful Tests 59

Section 8: RESTful Authentication 61

Section 9: Consuming RESTful APIs 63

Resources 72

About the Author 73

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

This is the eBook version of the printed book.

Since David Heinemeier Hansson’s keynote speech at RailsConf 2006 and the release of Rails 1.2 in early 2007, Representational State Transfer, better known as REST, has taken the Rails world by storm. If you’re new to REST, this short cut will help you decide which parts of the REST paradigm you want to introduce to your application. If you’re a developer with more RESTful experience, this short cut will introduce you to some refactorings that will give your application a cleaner, leaner code base, while also serving as a reference to much of the functionality REST has brought to Rails.

 

Section 1: What This Short Cut Covers 3

Section 2: What Is REST? 6

Section 3: Refactorings 10

Section 4: RESTful Controllers 31

Section 5: RESTful Routes 48

Section 6: RESTful Views 54

Section 7: RESTful Tests 59

Section 8: RESTful Authentication 61

Section 9: Consuming RESTful APIs 63

Resources 72

About the Author 73

More books from Pearson Education

Cover of the book Cisco Express Forwarding by Trotter Cashion
Cover of the book Sams Teach Yourself HTML, CSS, and JavaScript All in One by Trotter Cashion
Cover of the book My Samsung Galaxy Note II by Trotter Cashion
Cover of the book Writing a Business Report That Gets Read, Not Filed by Trotter Cashion
Cover of the book Sams Teach Yourself Tumblr in 10 Minutes by Trotter Cashion
Cover of the book Android Programming Unleashed by Trotter Cashion
Cover of the book The Essence of Software Engineering by Trotter Cashion
Cover of the book Adobe Photoshop Lightroom 2 How-Tos by Trotter Cashion
Cover of the book Tricks of the eBay Business Masters by Trotter Cashion
Cover of the book Essential Windows Workflow Foundation by Trotter Cashion
Cover of the book Marketing Communications by Trotter Cashion
Cover of the book Using Microsoft Access 2010 by Trotter Cashion
Cover of the book How to Get What You Want...Without Having to Ask by Trotter Cashion
Cover of the book Business Express: Managing productive meetings by Trotter Cashion
Cover of the book Learn to Code HTML and CSS by Trotter Cashion
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy