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Cloning Internet Applications with Ruby

You're reading from   Cloning Internet Applications with Ruby Make clones of some of the best applications on the Web using the dynamic and object-oriented features of Ruby

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2010
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781849511063
Length 336 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Chang Sau Sheong Chang Sau Sheong
Author Profile Icon Chang Sau Sheong
Chang Sau Sheong
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Who would find this book useful


The primary audience for this book are Ruby programmers with an intermediate level of experience in Ruby as well as web application programming. This sounds quite limiting but in reality if you have any intermediate level of programming in any object-oriented language you should be able to follow the implementations with relative ease. Of course, if you know something about the Ruby programming language it helps a lot too.

The technology stack that we will be using for these clones is slightly off the usual track for the Ruby on Rails crowd. The main reason is because it's a simpler stack to use. Ruby on Rails, while extremely easy to use and very powerful, has a lot of added frills to the framework, which adds on unnecessary complexity for a book that focuses on clones and features of the clones only. The chosen stack however does not different too greatly for programmers who are familiar with Rails. In this chapter we will go through all that is needed to follow the rest of the chapters in this book.

So why are we interested in cloning these applications at all, since we can't possibly build a clone that is better than the original? There are plenty of reasons for doing so but let me just give four common ones:

  1. To learn how these applications work. We use them all the time and while we would know how these applications functionally work, cloning them will teach us how these features can be implemented. Although the implementation is not definitive, at least learning how difficult or easy it is to clone them gives us a better appreciation of how things work behind the scenes to provide us with the features.

  2. To incorporate features of the clones into your own application. As you will see in this book, each chapter shows how key features in those applications are implemented. If you want to build these key features into your own application, learning how these features are implemented will give you an insight into building them for your own use.

  3. To build a customized clone. While each popular Internet application has plenty of features to go with, there will be special niche needs that can only be fulfilled by a customized version of that application.

  4. Learning the technology stack. The best way to learn any new technology stack is to build something with it. Going through the chapters in this book will give you ample exercise in this stack.

If you find yourself having any of the above needs then this book is for you.

You have been reading a chapter from
Cloning Internet Applications with Ruby
Published in: Aug 2010
Publisher: Packt
ISBN-13: 9781849511063
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