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Layered Design for Ruby on Rails Applications

You're reading from   Layered Design for Ruby on Rails Applications Discover practical design patterns for maintainable web applications

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781801813785
Length 298 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Vladimir Dementyev Vladimir Dementyev
Author Profile Icon Vladimir Dementyev
Vladimir Dementyev
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Table of Contents (20) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: Exploring Rails and Its Abstractions
2. Chapter 1: Rails as a Web Application Framework FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Active Models and Records 4. Chapter 3: More Adapters, Less Implementations 5. Chapter 4: Rails Anti-Patterns? 6. Chapter 5: When Rails Abstractions Are Not Enough 7. Part 2: Extracting Layers from Models
8. Chapter 6: Data Layer Abstractions 9. Chapter 7: Handling User Input outside of Models 10. Chapter 8: Pulling Out the Representation Layer 11. Part 3: Essential Layers for Rails Applications
12. Chapter 9: Authorization Models and Layers 13. Chapter 10: Crafting the Notifications Layer 14. Chapter 11: Better Abstractions for HTML Views 15. Chapter 12: Configuration as a First-Class Application Citizen 16. Chapter 13: Cross-Layers and Off-Layers 17. Index
18. Gems and Patterns 19. Other Books You May Enjoy

Generic services and granular abstractions

Services appear to be powerful the first time you use them. Not sure where to put code for yet another use case? Just create a file under app/services. As simple as that. We can even notice a tendency: developers discuss where to put certain code in the application’s file hierarchy.

This thinking-in-folders ideology is fundamentally broken. First, it usually implies that in any unclear situation, just create a service. Secondly, although a file structure positively affects developer experience and should be treated with respect, the place of the code in the application must be driven by its role, and the role is defined by the abstraction layer the code belongs to. Developers should think in abstractions, not folders when designing new features or refactoring legacy code.

Anemic models

Overusing service objects could lead to a situation when models do not carry any business logic (beyond object-relational mapping (ORM) or data...

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