Agile web development with Rails : a pragmatic guide
著者
書誌事項
Agile web development with Rails : a pragmatic guide
(Facets of Ruby series)
Pragmatic Bookshelf, c2005
大学図書館所蔵 全6件
  青森
  岩手
  宮城
  秋田
  山形
  福島
  茨城
  栃木
  群馬
  埼玉
  千葉
  東京
  神奈川
  新潟
  富山
  石川
  福井
  山梨
  長野
  岐阜
  静岡
  愛知
  三重
  滋賀
  京都
  大阪
  兵庫
  奈良
  和歌山
  鳥取
  島根
  岡山
  広島
  山口
  徳島
  香川
  愛媛
  高知
  福岡
  佐賀
  長崎
  熊本
  大分
  宮崎
  鹿児島
  沖縄
  韓国
  中国
  タイ
  イギリス
  ドイツ
  スイス
  フランス
  ベルギー
  オランダ
  スウェーデン
  ノルウェー
  アメリカ
注記
"The pragmatic programmers"--Cover
Includes index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
Rails is a full-stack, open-source web framework that enables you to create full-featured, sophisticated web-based applications, but with a twist...A full Rails application probably has less total code than the XML you'd need to configure the same application in other frameworks. With this book, you'll learn how to use ActiveRecord to connect business objects and database tables. No more painful object-relational mapping. Just create your business objects and let Rails do the rest. You'll learn how to use the Action Pack framework to route incoming requests and render pages using easy-to-write templates and components. See how to exploit the Rails service frameworks to send emails, implement web services, and create dynamic, user-centric web-pages using built-in Javascript and Ajax support. There are extensive chapters on testing, deployment, and scaling. You'll see how easy it is to install Rails using your web server of choice (such as Apache or lighttpd) or using its own included web server. You'll be writing applications that work with your favourite database (MySQL, Oracle, Postgres, and more) in no time at all.
You'll create a complete online store application in the extended tutorial section, so you'll see how a full Rails application is developed - iteratively and rapidly. Rails strives to honor the Pragmatic Programmer's "DRY Principle" by avoiding the extra work of configuration files and code annotations. You can develop in real-time: make a change, and watch it work immediately. Forget XML. Everything in Rails, from templates to control flow to business logic, is written in Ruby, the language of choice for programmers who like to get the job done well (and leave work on time for a change). Rails is the framework of choice for the new generation of Web 2.0 developers. "Agile Web Development with Rails" is the book for that generation, written by Dave Thomas (Pragmatic Programmer and author of "Programming Ruby") and David Heinemeier Hansson, who created Rails.
目次
1 Introduction 1.1 Rails is Agile 1.2 Finding Your Way Around 1.3 Acknowledgments 1.4 Stuff in Flux Part I--Getting Started 2 The Architecture of Rails Applications 2.1 Models, Views, and Controllers 2.2 Active Record: Rails Model Support 2.3 Action Pack: the View and Controller 3 Installing Rails 3.1 Installing on Windows 3.2 Installing on Mac OS X 3.3 Installing On Unix/Linux 3.4 Rails and Databases 3.5 Rails and ISPs 4 Instant Gratification 4.1 Creating a New Application 4.2 Hello, Rails! 4.3 Linking Pages Together 4.4 What We Just Did Part II--Building an Application 5 The Depot Application 5.1 Incremental Development 5.2 What Depot Does 5.3 Let's Code 6 Task A: Product Maintenance 6.1 Iteration A1: Get Something Running 6.2 Iteration A2: Add a Missing Column 6.3 Iteration A3: Validate! 6.4 Iteration A4: Prettier Listings 6.5 What We Just Did 7 Task B: Catalog Display 7.1 Iteration B1: Create the Catalog Listing 7.2 Iteration B2: Add Page Decorations 7.3 What We Just Did 8 Task C: Cart Creation 8.1 Sessions 8.2 More Tables, More Models 8.3 Iteration C1: Creating a Cart 8.4 Iteration C2: Handling Errors 8.5 Iteration C3: Finishing the Cart 8.6 What We Just Did 9 Task D: Checkout! 9.1 Iteration D1: Capturing an Order 9.2 Iteration D2: Show Cart Contents on Checkout 9.3 What We Just Did 10 Task E: Shipping 10.1 Iteration E1: Basic Shipping 10.2 What We Just Did 11 Task F: Administrivia 11.1 Iteration F1: Adding Users 11.2 Iteration F2: Logging In 11.3 Iteration F3: Limiting Access 11.4 Finishing Up 11.5 More Icing on the Cake 11.6 What We Just Did 12 Task T: Testing 12.1 Tests Baked Right In 12.2 Testing Models 12.3 Testing Controllers 12.4 Using Mock Objects 12.5 Test-Driven Development 12.6 Running Tests with Rake 12.7 Performance Testing 12.8 What We Just Did Part III--Rails in Depth 13 Rails in Depth 13.1 So Where's Rails? 13.2 Directory Structure 13.3 Rails Configuration 13.4 Naming Conventions 13.5 Active Support 13.6 Logging in Rails 13.7 Debugging Hints 13.8 What's Next 14 Active Record Basics 14.1 Tables and Classes 14.2 Columns and Attributes 14.3 Primary Keys and IDs 14.4 Connecting to the Database 14.5 CRUD--Create, Read, Update, Delete 14.6 Relationships Between Tables 14.7 Transactions 15 More Active Record 15.1 Acts As 15.2 Aggregation 15.3 Single Table Inheritance 15.4 Validation 15.5 Callbacks 15.6 Advanced Attributes 15.7 Miscellany 16 Action Controller and Rails 16.1 Context and Dependencies 16.2 The Basics 16.3 Routing Requests 16.4 Action Methods 16.5 Cookies and Sessions 16.6 Flash--Communicating Between Actions 16.7 Filters and Verification 16.8 Caching, Part One 17 Action View 17.1 Templates 17.2 Builder templates 17.3 RHTML Templates 17.4 Helpers 17.5 Formatting Helpers 17.6 Linking to Other Pages and Resources 17.7 Pagination 17.8 Form Helpers 17.9 Layouts and Components 17.10 Caching, Part Two 17.11 Adding New Templating Systems 18 The Web, V2.0 18.1 Introducing Ajax 18.2 The Rails Way 18.3 The User Interface, Revisited 18.4 Where To Go From Here 19 Action Mailer 19.1 Sending E-Mail 19.2 Receiving E-Mail 19.3 Testing E-Mail 20 Web Services on Rails 20.1 What AWS is (and What It Isn't) 20.2 The API Definition 20.3 Dispatching Modes 20.4 Using Alternate Dispatching 20.5 Method Invocation Interception 20.6 Testing Web Services 20.7 Protocol Clients 21 Securing Your Rails Application 21.1 SQL Injection 21.2 Cross Site Scripting (CSS/XSS) 21.3 Avoid Session Fixation Attacks 21.4 Creating Records Directly From Form Parameters 21.5 Don't Trust ID Parameters 21.6 Don't Expose Controller Methods 21.7 File Uploads 21.8 Don't Cache Authenticated Pages 21.9 Knowing That It Works 22 Deployment and Scaling 22.1 Picking a Production Platform 22.2 A Trinity of Environments 22.3 Iterating in the Wild 22.4 Maintenance 22.5 Scaling: The Share-Nothing Architecture 22.6 Finding and Dealing With Bottlenecks 22.7 Case Studies: Rails Running Daily Part IV--Appendices A Introduction to Ruby A.1 Ruby Is an Object-Oriented Language A.2 Ruby Names A.3 Methods A.4 Classes A.5 Modules A.6 Arrays and Hashes A.7 Control Structures A.8 Regular Expressions A.9 Blocks and Iterators A.10 Exceptions A.11 Marshaling Objects A.12 Interactive Ruby A.13 Ruby Idioms A.14 RDoc Documentation B Configuration Options B.1 Active Record Configuration B.2 Action Pack Configuration B.3 Action Mailer Configuration B.4 Test Case Configuration C Source Code C.1 The Full Depot Application C.2 Sample System Notifier C.3 Cross Reference of Code Samples
「Nielsen BookData」 より